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Hubble Too Sharp? Quantum Theory Flaws?

sckienle writes "Space.com has an article suggesting that the Hubble space telescope's pictures are too sharp. At least they are based on current interpretations of quantum theory. When viewing distant objects, 'the expected quantum effect is like a subtle version of the blurring caused by Earth's atmosphere, which makes stars twinkle.' But those effects do not seem to be present. The research will be published April 10 in the journal Astrophysical Research-Letters."

70 comments

  1. Of course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    The hubble telescope kicks ass!

  2. Too Sharp? by blues5150 · · Score: 3, Funny

    This is a bad thing because?

    --

    1. Re:Too Sharp? by psavo · · Score: 3, Informative

      because they don't know why.

      --
      fucktard is a tenderhearted description
    2. Re:Too Sharp? by Smidge204 · · Score: 2, Informative

      It's bad because the way Quantum theory is currently structured, it should be impossible for the image to be that clear. This observation basically threatens to turn all of quantum physics on it's ear.

      Of course, you could RTFA and get the exact same info. (3rd paragraph, to save you the trouble of reading the "whole thing")

      =Smidge=

    3. Re:Too Sharp? by aziegler · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Again ... that's bad? It just means that the current *theory* needs work. And here I thought that the point of science was to actually *seek answers*.

      -a

      --
      Ni bhionn an rath achx mar a mbionn an smacht (There is no Luck without Discipline)
    4. Re:Too Sharp? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who said it was "bad" as in evil. When blues5150 asked why it was bad, everyone answers why it was unexpected. Responses saying, "It's not bad" would be pointless, so people explained what was "wrong"/strange/different.

    5. Re:Too Sharp? by no+reason+to+be+here · · Score: 1

      It's not bad, it's good. This means that quantum theory will become more refined, or perhaps (though not bloody likely) just have quantum physics thrown out entirely for some other, better theory.

    6. Re:Too Sharp? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem is, scientists get funding from all different sources, and then spend a lot of time and money developing theories for their investors. These investors want to know that their investment is a good one, and having all the work they funded be suddenly irrelevent would not be a good investment. So the scientist has to protect his investors by maintaining only his own theory is valid, and everyone else is wrong. So if the hubble is too sharp, it obviously must be wrong, because the alternative that quantum theory is wrong represents too big a threat to the scientists' stream of funding... :-p

    7. Re:Too Sharp? by Smidge204 · · Score: 1

      Well, I didn't mean bad as in catastrophe, I ment bad as in "Crap, back to the drawing board." This is actually the very essence of science: Come up with a theory, and if evidence comes along that the theory can't explain, reconsider the theory. (As opposed to making excuses or ignoring the evidence)

      =Smidge=

    8. Re:Too Sharp? by RealErmine · · Score: 5, Funny

      Finally we are on to the aliens' plot! They've been holding still images in front of the Hubble lens for years, trying to keep us from seeing what's truly out there (namely: aliens and God's house). If it weren't for quantum theory we never would have figured it out. Those crafty, green devils!

      --
      Dewey, you fool! Your decimal system has played right into my hands!
    9. Re:Too Sharp? by jo42 · · Score: 1
      > because they don't know why.

      Because there is someone sitting in a NASA back room (in area 51) with GIMP on a 386SX drawing those images. And you all thought they where for real, silly geeks...

    10. Re:Too Sharp? by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      Finally we are on to the aliens' plot! They've been holding still images in front of the Hubble lens for years, trying to keep us from seeing what's truly out there (namely: aliens and God's house)

      Or, maybe they are just protecting us from the horrid Goatcex Nebula.

    11. Re:Too Sharp? by p3d0 · · Score: 1

      Um, some scientists work on theories. That's what they do. Theories are tools to help scientists find answers.

      --
      Patrick Doyle
      I mod down every jackass who puts his moderation policy in his sig. Oh, wait a sec....
  3. About time... by oren · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Applying relativity to the cosmos at large requires us to come up with exotic explanations for the "dark matter" problem. So far quantum mechanics had the luxury of not having such a problem. It is nice to know it has finally acuired one. It makes things more fair, somehow :-)

    What I'd love to see is someone showing that the effect on light over long distances was not to blur it, but rather to shift it to the red. Now *that* would really make a "big bang" out of our theories :-)

    1. Re:About time... by barawn · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, that's not really correct. It's quantum gravity that's having the problem, not quantum mechanics.

      Do we have a good theory of quantum gravity? Well, no. Guess what? It has problems. Good old quantum mechanics - the kind that doesn't try to look at times below the Planck time - still works perfectly fine.

      (Incidentally, redshifted light wouldn't cause a problem with the Big Bang - the Big Bang's best evidence is the god-awful huge ball of fire that we're bathed in that's taken the age of the universe minus about 100K years to cool. If light redshifts over large distances, that would mean that the universe is younger than we thought. Still would mean that it blew up.)

  4. never happy by Wuffle · · Score: 5, Funny

    First too blurry, now too sharp.

    Some people...

  5. Repair by breon.halling · · Score: 1

    Damn! I knew it should never have been repaired!

    --
    "Yeah, well, Dracula called and he's coming over tonight for you and I said okay."
    1. Re:Repair by jafuser · · Score: 1

      Heh.. I was thinking the same thing.. now THIS is irony...

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      Please consider making an automatic monthly recurring donation to the EFF
  6. Simulation argument by jafuser · · Score: 1

    Perhaps the rules were relaxed for what were assumed to be distant objects beyond the scope of our simulation. =)

    There is no spoon...

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    Please consider making an automatic monthly recurring donation to the EFF
    1. Re:Simulation argument by quintessent · · Score: 1

      Ah yes, the simulation argument. Rather compelling, but here's one big hole in it:

      It assumes that an "I" can exist within a simulation. That a collection of machine parts pretending to be my psyche (and perfectly so) will actually produce a being experiencing said existence.

      In short, they're assuming one side of the Chinese Room debate.

    2. Re:Simulation argument by Scott+Treppa · · Score: 1

      Would I be foolish in saying that the argument supplied by the parent is particularly over-complex? I though to of it this way.

      If there are human simulations, then we are in one. Why? Because WE sure as hell don't have them =) So our recursives must have them.

      If there are no simulators then... there aren't.

      Perhaps I'm over-simplifying?

      'Education and Religion are two things not regulated by supply and demand. The less of either the people have the less they want.'

    3. Re:Simulation argument by ethereal · · Score: 1

      Versus assuming that a collection of flesh and bone pretending to be you is actually a being capable of experiencing existence? Are you sure you really exist?

      --

      Your right to not believe: Americans United for Separation of Church and

    4. Re:Simulation argument by quintessent · · Score: 1

      I feel existence. There's nothing I know more directly.

      Yeah, I know, you can argue this for weeks. Very interesting stuff, I'd say.

      However, I still think I have the advantage. The sim argument can't just assume something that is doubtable. You can find many intelligent people who would doubt this component, so it's a flaw in the argument.

    5. Re:Simulation argument by rpresser · · Score: 1

      If there are human simulations, and we do not have them, it's entirely possible someone else in this non-simulated universe has them. (Fermi paradox set aside for the moment.)

  7. what the hell... by C21 · · Score: 1
    When viewing distant objects, 'the expected quantum effect is like a subtle version of the blurring caused by Earth's atmosphere, which makes stars twinkle

    Yeah, that's why they through it up into space. The bulk of atmospheric abberation happens due to the lower atmosphere, not the upper 25%.

    --
    this is not a sig.
    1. Re:what the hell... by GigsVT · · Score: 2, Funny

      In english, "like" or "as" is often used to show a similarity between two different concepts. This is sometimes called a "simile". Hard to understand, I know.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    2. Re:what the hell... by kmellis · · Score: 1
      "In english, 'like' or 'as' is often used to show a similarity between two different concepts. This is sometimes called a 'simile'. Hard to understand, I know."
      In contrast, people seem to grasp the concept of "sarcasm" quite well.
    3. Re:what the hell... by silicon_synapse · · Score: 1

      That's not sarcasm, though it may be a poor attempt at sarcasm.

    4. Re:what the hell... by kmellis · · Score: 1
      I wrote: "In contrast, people seem to grasp the concept of 'sarcasm' quite well."
      "That's not sarcasm, though it may be a poor attempt at sarcasm."
      Oh, well, you've clearly just proven me wrong. Haven't you, Socrates?
  8. Write-up and article not quite right by Iainuki · · Score: 5, Informative

    The problems with quantum theory seem to have come with some of the proposed properties of a merger with general relativity. In other words, this isn't going to affect non-relativistic quantum mechanics or even QED, except insofar as those theories are already incomplete or incorrect. Briefly, the scientists looked at Hubble photographs for signs of the quantization of space and time expected by many working on general relativity/quantum theory mergers, and didn't find any evidence of it. Interesting, if true, but not earth-shattering yet.

    1. Re:Write-up and article not quite right by shrikel · · Score: 1
      ...except insofar as those theories are already incomplete or incorrect

      Let me get this straight - you're saying that this article isn't going to make any theory incorrect that isn't already incorrect? That's a relief. I'm glad that correct theory won't be invalidated by these observations. ;)

      (I know, I know, I'm just a nitpicker.)

      --
      Any sufficiently simple magic can be passed off as mere advanced technology.
    2. Re:Write-up and article not quite right by Iainuki · · Score: 1
      Well, there are two reasons I chose that phrasing. First, there's some disagreement about whether non-relativistic quantum theory is complete, because of the question of what constitutes an observation and surrounding issues. Second, QED, as far as we know, is right. It, and the rest of the Standard Model, have passed every experimental test we've put them to. There are good reasons for thinking the Standard model isn't correct, but we don't have any evidence that it is yet. Also, of course, the Standard Model doesn't include general relativity, so it's arguably also not complete.

      If these results had been an attack on some aspect non-relativistic quantum mechanics or quantum field theory (like I thought when I first read the title), that would have been very surprising and almost certainly wrong.

      Just nit-picking in response to your nit-pick :).

  9. Alright! by Apreche · · Score: 0

    Current interpretations of quantum theory says that X will happen.

    Y happens.

    Answer? Current interpretations of quantum theory are incorrect.

    Heck, even I can figure this one out, and I'm a cs major!

    --
    The GeekNights podcast is going strong. Listen!
    1. Re:Alright! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Except that the effect thats missing is one due to interpreting space-time as a "quantum foam", not a direct interpretation of quantum theory itself.

    2. Re:Alright! by cmdr_beeftaco · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      Heck, even I can figure this one out, and I'm a cs major!
      Gosh they sure make you smart up there at the Devry School Of Computer Science and Refrigeration Repair. My advice to you is sick with the counter-strike major and don't dabble in physics.

    3. Re:Alright! by MarvinMouse · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Okay...

      1. A := modern interpretation of quantum theory, with time and space quantized.

      2. A -> C, where c := space-time is quantum foam

      3. C -> B, where B := Hubble telescope images should be blurry due to quantum foam.

      4. O := Observations

      O != B.

      Therefore step 1,2,3 or 4 is incorrect. 4 is assumes to be correct, 3 is mathematically accurate from modern interpretations, 2 may be incorrect, but likely is not, since it follows very naturally from 1. Therefore, it is likely our initial assumption, A, in step 1, is the assumption in error.

      (Just trying to be more mathematical about it. ^_^)

      --
      ~ kjrose
    4. Re:Alright! by syrinx · · Score: 1

      DeVry doesn't offer degrees in Computer Science.

      Nice try, though.

      --
      Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum sonatur.
    5. Re:Alright! by Pooua · · Score: 1
      1. A := modern interpretation of quantum theory, with time and space quantized.

      As I understand it, quantum theory does not call for time and space to be quantized. It allows for it, but the two ideas (quantum theory and quantized space-time) are distinguishable.

      I just read a "Spacedaily" article that seems clear enough on the point:

      "Using two HST images, astronomers from Italy and Germany looked for but did not find evidence supporting a prevailing scientific theory that says time, space and gravity are composed of tiny quantum bits.

      "'You can say,' said Ragazzoni, 'that this measurement constrains the quantum gravity theory to certain parameters.'"

      "The Planck-scale quantum theories of time, space and gravity were derived from attempts to calculate the theoretical limits to electromagnetic energy, according to a UAH physicist, Dr. Richard Lieu.

      "In his theory of general relativity, Einstein theorized that time, space and gravity are different manifestations of the same phenomenon, much as light and thunder are signatures of the electrical discharge in lightning. If time is made up of quantum bits, that would also mean space and gravity should also be composed of quantum units.

      "Since the expected blurring 'signature' of quantum space time isn't seen, however, it might mean that time isn't made of quantum bits, and neither are space or gravity."

      Spacedaily: Astronomers Deal Blow To Quantum Theories Of Time, Space, Gravity

      I know a lot of smug geeks who used to like to insist we all contemplate ideas of, for example, quantum time, as if just thinking of such things meant they were better people than everyone else. Hah! I guess this will show 'em!

      --
      Taking stuff apart since 1969 (TM)
  10. proof positive by gonar · · Score: 2, Funny

    that the universe is just a painted backdrop, and the NASA "moon missions" _were_ a hoax!

    --
    The difference between Theory and Practice is greater in Practice than in Theory.
    1. Re:proof positive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... that you should empty your savings account and send all that cash to me.

  11. What if the universe really IS a doughnut? by Rares+Marian · · Score: 1

    Wouldn't the distance be too short then?

    --
    The message on the other side of this sig is false.
  12. Shucks by arvindn · · Score: 2, Funny
    "If time doesn't become 'fuzzy' beneath a Planck interval, this discovery will present problems to several astrophysical and cosmological models, including the Big Bang model of the universe," Lieu says.

    I can already hear the "I told you so"s from the creationists.

    1. Re:Shucks by Havokmon · · Score: 1
      "If time doesn't become 'fuzzy' beneath a Planck interval, this discovery will present problems to several astrophysical and cosmological models, including the Big Bang model of the universe," Lieu says.
      I can already hear the "I told you so"s from the creationists.

      What? So when God made the Universe, it made no sound? Not even a 'fzzzzt'?
      Oh wait, that's at the end.

      --
      "I can't give you a brain, so I'll give you a diploma" - The Great Oz (blatently stolen sig)
  13. Sensitivity please by mike_mgo · · Score: 3, Funny
    Ragazzoni explained, some parts of the light's wave should be retarded with respect to others

    Don't be cruel, some parts of the light have special needs.

  14. Photoshop? by DarkHand · · Score: 1

    Did they remember to look at Hubble's raw images and not the 'enhanced' ones the public usually sees?

  15. Links to preprints by bwallace · · Score: 5, Informative

    If you are interested in actually reading the papers, they can be found on the arXiv.org e-Print archive, and directly here and here. I would suggest the first article - the math doesn't look so hairy.

  16. The more we think we know by PineHall · · Score: 1

    The universe is pretty amazing. Its design is something that we still struggle with and, IMHO we will always struggle with it. It seems that the more we discover, the more questions we have.

    1. Re:The more we think we know by spot35 · · Score: 1

      ... and when we finally discover the meaning of the universe it will disappear and a new even more inexplicable universe will take its place.

  17. Now I trust that ... by Snork+Asaurus · · Score: 3, Insightful

    they checked with the Hubble folks to make sure that they hadn't applied some sort of (pseudo)sharpening techniques along with all the other processing (like false-coloring, et al) that they do. The article didn't say that they analyzed raw data.

    --
    Sigs are bad for your health.
  18. Isn't that a bit like ... by Rip!ey · · Score: 1

    Hubble space telescope's pictures are too sharp

    Isn't that a bit like complaining that a programmers code is too efficient?

    Hubble pictures are crisp and clear, no matter the distance to the object. And that, say two separate teams of researchers, might mean there are flaws in quantum theory.

    Now I'm confused. Are there actually people who believe our understanding is that good that there wouldn't be flaws in such theories?

    It's like someone once told me that the laws of physics break down as we approach the singularity of a black hole. I answered that by suggesting that the only thing to break down might well be our understanding.

    1. Re:Isn't that a bit like ... by StringBlade · · Score: 1
      There was a Discover article a couple months back that talked about a theory of black holes suggesting they are not really holes at all, nor are they singularities. The theory roughly states that black holes may really be a large spherical area inside of which time comes to a halt. It's still a massive body so there is gravity, but the reason light doesn't escape is because it stops moving.

      It was a very interesting article and a very interesting theory...riding on the tails of an issue a couple months prior to that featuring Alan Guth and his theories of the first instants of the Big Bang -- also interesting but contradictory in some respect to the theories posed in the "black ball" article.

      --
      ...and that's the way the cookie crumbles.
  19. Schmantum Physics by billcopc · · Score: 0

    Why is it that someone or thing challenges the entire sphere of quantum physics every time an Avril Lavigne song is played on MTV, which is about every 3 minutes ?

    Quantum Physics is a theory, it's a collection of drunken synaptic misfires that have been magically put into words. It's religion for people too smart to believe in god. It mostly makes sense, but only in relation to itself, or to other trivial facts that don't really mean anything.

    A picture is only too sharp when Photoshop adds multicolored ringing artifacts to your edges. but THIS is just some clever scientist wannabe who is trying to prolong his career of doing nothing for lots of money.

    --
    -Billco, Fnarg.com
  20. Oh No! by splerdu · · Score: 1

    "If time doesn't become 'fuzzy' beneath a Planck interval, this discovery will present problems to several astrophysical and cosmological models, including the Big Bang model of the universe,"

    Hubble HAS to be wrong! Or we'll have to re-work them quantum physics theories over!

    I dunno about you, but this smells a bit of blaming the data when the hypothesis doesn't hold up, back during the days of high-school science lab classes.

  21. Billions of dollars by Tablizer · · Score: 1

    They are working on a new space scope that is supposed to be even sharper than Hubble. What if by chance Hubble is close to (but not at) the threshold where this quantum blurring shows up. If so, then the next generation scope may be over-engineered and not much of an improvement over Hubble. We could be wasting billions building a scope to specifications that cannot contribute to better views. It seems no longer just an academic problem/issue, but a financial one as well.

    1. Re:Billions of dollars by JohnFluxx · · Score: 1

      On the other hand, they would have shown that the threshold exists - so the money wouldn't have been wasted.

    2. Re:Billions of dollars by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      On the other hand, they would have shown that the threshold exists - so the money wouldn't have been wasted.

      It would still be dissapointing to many who hoped for sharp pictures of say baby galaxies.

      I wonder if there is not a way to find out the limit without making a fat scope.

      Also, perhaps it only affects things that are many billions of lightyears away. Thus, we could still get sharp pictures of more "local" stuff perhaps.

  22. From hubble.h by CodeWheeney · · Score: 1

    void CompensateForQuantumErrors( BYTE* pRawData );

    --
    C8H10N4O2 | Developer > Code
  23. Original paper by Stuntmonkey · · Score: 1

    If you want more than the Space.com article, read the PDF preprint entitled "Lack of observational evidence for quantum structure of space-time at Planck scales".

    Just so people understand what's going on here, this work affects the many (untested) theories that posit some kind of "quantum of distance". There are two basic reasons that people are considering these types of theories:

    • At very short distance scales, the two great physical theories of general relativity and quantum mechanics (the Standard Model) are incompatible. Something interesting must occur on the scale of the Planck length = 10^-35 meters.
    • Many physicists have an intuitive distaste for the infinite amount of information required to specify the location of a single particle, in a truly continuous universe. Some view the universe as some kind of cellular automaton, again giving rise to a discrete grid and "quantum of distance". Proponents here would be (maybe) Feynman, Fredkin, and (most recently) Wolfram.

    Anyway, what the current work does is put a bound on the "graininess" of space. Pretty clever, if correct.

    1. Re:Original paper by barawn · · Score: 1

      At very short distance scales, the two great physical theories of general relativity and quantum mechanics (the Standard Model) are incompatible. Something interesting must occur on the scale of the Planck length = 10^-35 meters.

      Kindof. It's definitely not true that quantum field theory and general relativity are incompatible. Quantum field theory spans ridiculous orders of magnitude in what it's been verified over - from several hundred GeV (in position space, a tiny fraction of the width of a proton) to interstellar distances. It's a quantum theory that generalizes easily to a continuum limit. That is, it's ideal for a 'fundamental theory' of nature. The reason we believe something else is there is because it isn't that elegant. Big whoop.

      General relativity is not. It also spans pretty ridiculous orders of magnitude in verification, because in the weak-field limit, it's just gravity (though Pioneer acts weird...) and we've verified it pretty dang well in the strong field limit.

      But it is NOT a good quantum theory. It does not generalize well in the distance -> 0 limit (equivalently the high energy case). Therefore, everyone knows it can't be a fundamental theory of nature. It's a continuum limit - just like good old electricity & magnetism are the continuum limit of quantum electrodynamics.

      People say general relativity breaks down in the singularity of a black hole. That's true - the metric becomes singular at that point, and we don't know how to handle singularities in a continuum limit. We're pretty good at handling them in a quantum sense - they usually arise from a misunderstanding of the object being measured.

      The problem that people are having is that quantum field theories seem to be fundamentally limited in the physics that they can possibly describe, and gravity doesn't seem to be within that limit. Hell, the strong interactions seem to be BARELY within that limit. So the -ideas- that quantum field theory is describing are fine. It's just that we don't have the math (or the math may not exist: no one ever said it has to exist!) to describe gravity in such a way. Hence the reason that people are doing wacko weird things.

      And go fig. Those wacko weird things aren't as easy as dimensional arguments would seem. Never would've guessed. Most likely the Planck scale is a bit farther off. Couple factors of (1/2pi) maybe.

  24. That is a truly horrid thought by VultureMN · · Score: 1

    And for some reason the idea of a goatcex nebula makes me think of Lovecraft. Horror and evil beyond comprehension...

  25. Well-overstated claims in article by siskbc · · Score: 4, Insightful
    In other words, this isn't going to affect non-relativistic quantum mechanics or even QED, except insofar as those theories are already incomplete or incorrect.

    No kidding. My first reservation was reading about how the article "will be published." One of the things to always be leery of is research that is released to the media before published. And they've talked to massive numbers of pseudo-scientific journalists and websites. Second, it's being published in a "letters" journal. Not the highest standards, because they're not publishing a full article. Third, these claims are being put out by groups from places like the University of Alabama at Huntsville. I'm not saying great research CAN'T be done at such places...but combined with the way they've gone about publishing, it smacks of someone trying to drum up their own PR.

    Now, as for the actual claims in the article, they're talking about how blurred these pictures should be, with reference to the Planck time, and invoked a quantum gravity argument. The existence of a quantum gravity has never been proven rigorously, and has been a bane to the efforts of unifying the four major forces for years. So, if anything, they've managed to poke holes in a theory that everyone admits is thoroughly "under construction."

    The next problem is that the entire fundamental point of their study assumes that uncertainties in time propogate over distance, and that the uncertainty in wavelength can be interpreted as a superposition of waves of complete certainty. This is a sketchy and controversial means of implementing this. Had they stopped before they got here, and said that their results imply that maybe this big assumption is dead wrong, they would have made a significant contribution.

    However, they don't stop there. They then go on to discuss potential implications including an infinitely dense universe at the time of the big bang, which assumes that both their results as well as the flawed theories they invoke are correct, but that the collected works on theoretical physics are wrong. It's happened before, but not usually. It's a massive reach, but they include it because doing so is likely to get them more exposure than their more legitimate claims. And have no doubt, this will gather much more attention in the "Scientific American" crowd of science-groupies than it will in academia.

    My problem with this isn't that they didn't do a cool experiment - they did. The problem is that they extended its impact far too wide. When confronted with their evidence that invalidates one of two theories, they choose to interpret it as invalidating the more established theory, as that gets them more press. Their research was fine on its own, but it seems they are more interested in publicity. Reminds me of a group in Utah about 15 years ago...

    --

    -Looking for a job as a materials chemist or multivariat

    1. Re:Well-overstated claims in article by Idarubicin · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Third, these claims are being put out by groups from places like the University of Alabama at Huntsville.

      Actually, the group on which the article writer focuses works out of the Astrophysical Observatory of Arcetri and the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy. I'm not an expert in cosmology, and I don't know about the Astrophysical Observatory of Arcetri--but I do know that in general the Max Planck Institute is a pretty respectable name in physics. The article did note that related analyses performed at U of A at Huntsville have generated similar results...and that's a good thing.

      You're quite right that they have made some big leaps in some of their reasoning (apparently; as you say, their letter hasn't actually been distributed yet). Since it is just a letter, perhaps some fanciful thinking is permissible...what harm is there in a little imagination? Yes, it smacks of self-promotion--but we should consider that it may not be entirely the fault of the researchers.

      In their defense, in the linked article at Space.com, I caught a couple of terms being misused/abused in ways that you don't usually see from astrophysicists. We might have a science writer in a little over his head, looking to write an article sensational enough to appeal to laypeople. I know it happens to medical researchers all the time--dig out some old newspapers, and you'll be pleased to note we've cured cancer on a roughly monthly basis over the last ten years. Looking at the actual quotations from the reseachers in the article (there are only two), they don't seem that sensational.

      It could even be that the researchers didn't want a lot of press coverage, but were victims of overzealous PR flunkies. I'm prepared to give them the benefit of the doubt until I actually get to see their publication.

      --
      ~Idarubicin
    2. Re:Well-overstated claims in article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Karma: can only be portioned out by the cosmos. (Your moderation has nothing to do with it.)"

      I *am* part of the cosmos.

  26. Says Who, Perkin Elmer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    You know PE, the ones who made the out-of-focus mirror system for Hubble, then got away with it saying the budge for the mirror was enough to *make* it just not enough to *test* it before sending it into space.

    PE: "man the images from that hubble sure are sharp. Yesiree bob"

  27. What does it mean by Muhammar · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It just means that some current extensions of Standart model and/or some of its interpretations may not hold. Maybe there is no quantum foam at all - and everything is made of rubber (strings).

    Standart model of quantum physics is known to be incomplete - there is no satisfying Grand unification with relativistic theory of gravity and while there are many modifications possible in quantum physics, we do not know which theory (if any) from the current extensions - or complete overhauls like String theory - are correct.

    The search beyond the standart model is hampered by the available power of particle accelerators - it is simply hard to get on the level of energies where we could see the new physics.
    I hope this observation turns out to be a good piece of experimental data which can show the theorists the right direction.

    --
    I doubt that we will ever figure out - and I suspect that even if we did figure out we couldn't do much about it
  28. Some crackpot in his basement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    is not going to get to take pictures with the HUBBLE

  29. Of course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    No, ppl don't think they understand the universe so well that there might not be holes in their theories. That's why they looked at the Hubble images to see how sharp they were.

    Having found that time is not visibly quantized, they might start to wonder by what mechanism is light propaged over the light-eons so precisely. Maybe there IS something smaller than quanta that can be discovered and learned from.

    Maybe it will enable us to become like or even surpass the Q and their decadent continuum.

    All we need to do is not become Borg before then.

  30. THIS is what it means by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    It means that in the belly of Osiris was a cocoon. The cocoon stayed there inside the God of the Dead until Mum-Ra the nemisis of the sacred cats of the Thunderclap gored Osiris with a hook causing the cocoon to fall out onto the floor. The cocoon cracked on impact and soon hatched a nymph of light.

    The nymph flew higher and higher into the sky growing brighter and brighter until the male and female parts of the nymph cleaved. The male part went up into the sky and we call it Ra or the Sun. The female part, much smaller became the moon. They had a daughter named Tyin'K-ERB-ael that can be found in forests where rings of mushrooms grow. It is said that if she lands upon you and you are happy, you can fly.

    Osiris died again and the Cats of the Thunderclap fought Mum-Ra for years until Mum-Ra was finally defeated by tricking him into going inside a Great Pyrimid built by Mum-Ra's own human slaves to accumulate energy from the corpse of a devine king. The Cats of the Thunderclap sealed Mum-Ra in his own tomb and destroyed the antennae that was to beam the Energon Cubes of power to Mum-Ra's ship so that the lifeforce would bathe the earth in benevolence from then on. As long as nobody disturbs Mum-Ra, he will remain imprisoned forever.

    The Cats of the Thunderclap, being mere mortals soon took up residence with the humans they'd rescued from the slavery of Mum-Ra. Eventually they actually interbred, their decendents still dream of the half human half cat beauties of olde and draw them in the Japanimation style.

    In the middle ages a race of metal men 5 meters tall or more appeared and tried to repair the antenna on the top of the great pyramid, but others - wheeled ones that could not fly like the evil ones, intervened before they could sap the earth of it's vital force.

    In the greatest of battles between these metal men most were damaged or destroyed on both sides, however the ruckus attracted a third sinister force from the sky. These dark characters sent monsters to subdue the local population, and would have succeeded too if it weren't for the benevolent princess and her five lion warriors.

    The warriors were from the line of kings leading all the way back to the Cats of the Thunderclap of olde and had passed down the secrets of those Cats over the generations. The lion warriors rode their huge metal lions out to battle the monsters sent by the dark one above and though the fighting was desperate, the lions joined magically into a metal man that defeated the monsters with his magnificent lazer sword.

    The day won, the elemental lions returned to their homes the earth's energy safe.

    But time marches on and new threats rear their ugly head and newheroes must arise. The princess and her lion warriors left the earth in their flying castle ages ago. Now there is Amano Jaku and Nagumo to defend us from Mum-Ra who has been stirring again because insolent arcaeologists have ignored the Mummy's curse.

  31. Not his first time by siskbc · · Score: 1
    Yes, it smacks of self-promotion--but we should consider that it may not be entirely the fault of the researchers

    Fair distinction - I will amend what I originally wrote. There are two groups working on this, one from Huntsville, AB, and one from Planck/Italy. Here are two quotes from these guys, the first one from Planck, the second from UAH:

    "You don't see a universe that is blurred," he said. "If you take any Hubble Space Telescope Deep Field image you see sharp images, which is enough to tell us that the light has not been distorted or perturbed by fluctuations in space-time from the source to the observer." (Roberto Ragazzoni, Planck)

    "If time doesn't become 'fuzzy' beneath a Planck interval, this discovery will present problems to several astrophysical and cosmological models, including the Big Bang model of the universe," (Richard Lieu, UAH).

    Now, I have no problem with Ragazzoni's statement, but Lieu's is ridiculous - having the audacity that this result will cause problems to the big bang model? I think it's a bit early to even think of saying that.

    This Lieu guy has given multiple interviews, and they all have similarly "grand" conclusions. The Planck guy, who is established, speaks cautiously, while the Associate Professor at UAH (read: still doesn't have an endowed position) plugs himself as much as possible. I don't have any problem with being optimstic that you do something amazing, but this guy doesn't seem to have that degree of cautiousness and suspicion about one's results that scientists HAVE to have. Lacking that, embarassment will result. It's something we all learn...most of us.

    Additionally, this isn't the first time he's done this. Back in 99, he made a moderately interesting discovery regarding some phantom radiation from what seemed like empty space. He then insinuated that he had found a major source of dark matter - a big stretch given what he actually did. I'm just saying, this guy has a pattern of drumming up PR and overstating claims.

    Basically, I think the space.com interview might be best done AFTER publication, and it might be best to let others decide how good your work is. And as for blaming this on an overzealous PR department - I don't know where his university's PR flunkies would have gotten this info if not from him, and for this to happen twice - I dunno about that. I don't want to sound too critical, but I've seen this stuff too often at conferences and such, and it always gets disproven/retracted/downplayed.

    For what it's worth, I still think it was a really cool, and even important experiment. I think it stood on its own without the suspicious and grandiose claims...but that's what it needed to get in MSNBC. Hope his tenure committee considered MSNBC to be a publication.

    --

    -Looking for a job as a materials chemist or multivariat

  32. scientific journalism by Submarine · · Score: 1

    A little anecdote: a couple of days ago, I was at a seminar for beginning researchers. We had a lady, a head of an association of science journalists. She explained to us that:
    - science journalists, as all journalists, work in a hurry ( 2 hours for most articles in daily papers);
    - consequently, they check facts very fast, maybe calling some researchers or the PR staff at their institute (unsaid: they don't cross-check);
    - they of course don't have the expertise to judge, since their scientific training is very generic;
    - they most often than not don't write the title of the article, which is chosen to catch the eye;
    - they like catchy phrases and analogies; nuances and reservations that scientists like to make are bad, because they cut the sensation;
    - scientists do not generally read the article before publication.

    Talking about alpha-interferon action on the outer membrane of 3-beta cells doesn't cut it - you have to add that it may mean a "cure for cancer". Astronomical discoveries have to be made up into studies about possible extraterrestrial life.

    So what you describe is very likely: the researchers make reasonable claims, but PR staff and journalists turns it into some sensationalist stuff.

    I may add that I was once interviewed by a journalist, and my quotations were truncated so that they seemed more aggressive. Do not assume that anything quoted is verbatim.