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LHC Data Continues To Disagree With Supersymmetry

decora writes "Pallab Ghosh of the BBC reports on another piece of evidence hitting the beleaguered Supersymmetry community. Scientists at the Lepton Photon conference in Mumbai, India confirmed that extra levels of B-Meson decay have not been found in the LHC beauty experiment. Coming on the heels of a March report in Nature, this news seems to reinforce what many have suspected all along. Dark Matter is probably not explainable through massive shadow particles like squarks and selectrons, and for all practical purposes, the Supersymmetric Extension of the Standard Model of Physics is dead."

196 comments

  1. Higgs Boson == /dev/null by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is no Higgs Boson. - Accept it!
    "Matter does not exist" - Hans-Peter Dürr http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rFTuI0G0hh8
    "Die Welt entsteht im Auge des Betrachters" - Humberto Maturana

    1. Re:Higgs Boson == /dev/null by Pikoro · · Score: 0

      oops, forgot to check that Post Anonymously box this time eh?

      --
      "Freedom in the USA is not the ability to do what you want. It is the ability to stop others from doing what THEY want"
    2. Re:Higgs Boson == /dev/null by ehrichweiss · · Score: 1

      Carver Mead ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carver_Mead ) has been saying something similar for years....And I came up with a similar view a few years after he published his book on the subject, without having read his book or even previously hearing or thinking of anything about particles not existing; it just came to me...

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wave%E2%80%93particle_duality#Wave-only_view

      --
      0x09F911029D74E35BD84156C5635688C0
    3. Re:Higgs Boson == /dev/null by mcantsin · · Score: 0

      ... sure. send the other message into the LHC. Higgs Boson will beam it into /dev/null. Greetings from Schrödinger's Cat =^.^=

    4. Re:Higgs Boson == /dev/null by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 1

      Hmmm. Frankly, the guy sounds like a bit of a loon on the subject, which is a very common problem when brilliant, accomplished people in one field who are used to being "the smartest guy in the room" try to tackle problems in a related field which lies just outside the area of their expertise. (I'm looking at you, Slashdot.)

      --
      The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
    5. Re:Higgs Boson == /dev/null by ehrichweiss · · Score: 1

      Possibly, but the idea didn't originate with Mead; it's been around long enough that they were considering it in the days of Einstein, even if they rejected it at the time. But there's more than
      just Mead, myself, and some old fogies taking this line of thinking seriously...

      http://www.popsci.com/science/article/2010-10/fermilab-building-holometer-determine-if-universe-just-hologram

      --
      0x09F911029D74E35BD84156C5635688C0
    6. Re:Higgs Boson == /dev/null by Forty+Two+Tenfold · · Score: 2, Funny

      Hans-Peter Dürr

      Otherwise known as Herr Durr.

      --
      Upward mobility is a slippery slope - the higher you climb the more you show your ass.
    7. Re:Higgs Boson == /dev/null by surveyork · · Score: 1

      I see what you did there.

      --
      2019 is going to be the year of Linux on the desktop.
    8. Re:Higgs Boson == /dev/null by surveyork · · Score: 1

      I like any theory that could get rid of particle-wave duality, be it this one, or any other. Thanks for the link! As an aside, I've perused Wikipedia (I know, I know) in the past trying to understand a bit of quantum mechanics and, oh boy, I was floored when I reached the section about interpretations of quantum mechanics: there are like 20 or so listed there. O_o

      --
      2019 is going to be the year of Linux on the desktop.
    9. Re:Higgs Boson == /dev/null by tqk · · Score: 1

      I like any theory that could get rid of particle-wave duality, be it this one, or any other.

      Honestly, why? I've always considered that duality to be a feature. Being able to study phenomena from two (or more?) otherwise unrelated vectors is useful, isn't it? I know physicists always prefer the holy grail of symplicity, but wtf is wrong with having multiple valid paths to explain what's actually happening?

      Or, in /. terms, what's wrong with car analogies as long as they're valid?

      --
      "Tongue tied and twisted, just an Earth bound misfit ..." -- Pink Floyd.
    10. Re:Higgs Boson == /dev/null by surveyork · · Score: 2

      Disclaimer: I am not a physicist. Why I don't like the model? I guess the main reason is that the particle-wave model goes way over my head. Then, I know about the experiments, the hard data and the math, but something that can be understood in such differing ways sounds suspicious to me, like there's something we don't understand yet and had to "patch things up" with the P-W model (which fits quite nicely). I have no proof or data to back up what I've just said. I admit it's just a hunch or wishful thinking or just my inability to grasp the concept. My quantum-mechanical pet peeve.

      --
      2019 is going to be the year of Linux on the desktop.
    11. Re:Higgs Boson == /dev/null by tqk · · Score: 1

      Disclaimer: I am not a physicist.

      Ditto, fwiw.

      ... but something that can be understood in such differing ways sounds suspicious to me, like there's something we don't understand yet and had to "patch things up" ...

      To paraphrase Richard Feynman, "Yeah, it doesn't make any sense, but this is the way this stuff works." Besides, this happens all the time in other fields. Take software: structured vs. object oriented, waterfall method vs. $DOGS_BREAKFAST_OF_TLAS.

      My quantum-mechanical pet peeve.

      You should save that for the string theorists. :-) That stuff makes quantum mechanics look drop dead believable.

      --
      "Tongue tied and twisted, just an Earth bound misfit ..." -- Pink Floyd.
    12. Re:Higgs Boson == /dev/null by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hans-Peter Dürr

      Otherwise known as Herr Durr.

      DOKTOR Herr Durr to you!

    13. Re:Higgs Boson == /dev/null by JordanL · · Score: 1

      So it appears that what they're proposing in that article you linked is that the third dimension (depth) is actually the same as time, and since nothing can travel faster than the speed of light, nothing your universe (i.e. the reality you experience during the entirety of your existence no matter what happens to you or where you go) interacts with could correctly represent the totality of that dimension to you due the the limit of the speed of information. Which would in other words mean that the subjective experience of any particular portion of reality has a completely different experience of the "third" dimension. (Which is the "hologram" effect.)

      That's very interesting. I actually know someone that is almost finished writing a high-level book about the metaphysics of this sort of physics. The subjectivity of the third dimension combined with a wave-only view of the universe would mean a lot more about the inherent interconnectedness of everything, in the sense that we would all be unique expressions of the same wave of energy rippling across what we describe as space-time.

  2. Higgs Boson == /dev/null by mcantsin · · Score: 0

    There is no Higgs Boson. - Accept it! "Matter does not exist" - Hans-Peter Dürr http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rFTuI0G0hh8 "Die Welt entsteht im Auge des Betrachters" - Humberto Maturana

  3. What is with this... by tyrus568 · · Score: 5, Funny

    So I clicked on the wikipedia link for supersymmetric extension and tried to read the first three paragraphs.

    I encountered these: "supersymmetric partners, the weak scale, the hierarchy problem, quantum corrections, a fermionic superpartner, superparticles, squarks, gluinos, neutralinos, sleptons, R-parity, explicit soft supersymmetry breaking operators, large flavor changing neutral currents and electric dipole moments."

    I always knew I wanted to be diagonal in flavor space to make the new CP violating phases vanish.

    There is something deeply disturbing in the heads of physicists...

    1. Re:What is with this... by Mitchell314 · · Score: 1

      There's something deeply disturbed in how nature works.

      --
      I read TFA and all I got was this lousy cookie
    2. Re:What is with this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I do like the slept-ons though.

    3. Re:What is with this... by AI0867 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Nah, the problem is how we describe it.

    4. Re:What is with this... by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 1

      Every technical field has its jargon that's incomprehensible to outsiders. It doesn't mean the people who use it are crazy. Complex problems require complex descriptions; not everything can be reduced to a sound bite.

      --
      The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
    5. Re:What is with this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Its like blowing up a balloon. Clear now?

    6. Re:What is with this... by belg4mit · · Score: 5, Informative
      --
      Were that I say, pancakes?
    7. Re:What is with this... by 0123456 · · Score: 3, Funny

      Every technical field has its jargon that's incomprehensible to outsiders. It doesn't mean the people who use it are crazy. Complex problems require complex descriptions; not everything can be reduced to a sound bite.

      But particle physics in particular seems to have vanished up its own asshole in the last couple of decades Every problem seems to be solved by inventing a new particle which will show up if only we spend ten times as much on the next machine.

    8. Re:What is with this... by Stormwatch · · Score: 1

      I always knew I wanted to be diagonal in flavor space to make the new CP violating phases vanish.

      They say CP violates a phase called "childhood".

    9. Re:What is with this... by wdsci · · Score: 1

      But particle physics in particular seems to have vanished up its own asshole in the last couple of decades Every problem seems to be solved by inventing a new particle which will show up if only we spend ten times as much on the next machine.

      As a particle physicist, I fully endorse this ;-)

    10. Re:What is with this... by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'm not sure I see how particle physics is any worse than ... oh ... say ... software engineering in that regard. Seriously, we here on /. don't tend to notice it as much because we're immersed in it, but have you ever noticed how fast any programming-related discussion here becomes an exchange of jargon? That's because new languages, new data structures, new API's, and new toolsets are being developed all the time, and they all need names. If you're working in the field, you know what these things are; if you're not, a discussion about them might as well be a string of random alphanumeric characters on the screen. I have no doubt that to physicists, all the terms the OP was mocking make perfect sense (a lot of physicists may disagree about whether the things the terms describe actually exist, but that's a separate issue -- and again, one not unique to physics.)

      --
      The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
    11. Re:What is with this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's something deeply disturbing about people who think that the macroscopic world must behave the same way as the microscopic world.

    12. Re:What is with this... by NoNonAlphaCharsHere · · Score: 1

      I feel certain that if we add a few more hypothetical particles and their anti-particles, along with some new virtual particles to transmit forces between them and the rest of the particle zoo, and (at most) four new carefully tuned fudge factors^W^Wcosmological constants to make the math come out right, depending on how many extra space-like dimensions you postulate, that suddenly, miraculously, the Standard Model will become a thing of breathtakingly elegant simplicity and great descriptive and predictive power.

    13. Re:What is with this... by NoNonAlphaCharsHere · · Score: 5, Funny

      Slept-ons are emitted when a futon decays.

    14. Re:What is with this... by Oligonicella · · Score: 1

      This is what happens when a group of people believe infinity is a real thing.

    15. Re:What is with this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's something deeply disturbed in our understanding ofhow nature works.
      FTFY
      How a system works can't be told from the inside of the same system. It can only be modeled, and probabilistic models can't prove they are "the good enough ones". A simple equation can be a good probabilistic model for "Did Alice go out to buy a loaf of bread today, Y/N?", yet the model for the brain of Alice making such a decision is clearly a bit different.

      So, I agree with the other comment "Nah, the problem is how we describe it" .

    16. Re:What is with this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The terms "macroscopic" and "microscopic" are relative to a human's ability to observe the events. The idea that the Universe has some kind of Bipolar disorder, as opposed to it all being a lack of understanding on your part, is even more disturbing.

    17. Re:What is with this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In other words, from our point of view there is no practical difference in the two phrases and you have defeated your own semantic argument. When we say how the system works, it is of course by definition our understanding of how that system works. This is implicit, and does not need to be stated.

    18. Re:What is with this... by flargleblarg · · Score: 1

      But particle physics in particular seems to have vanished up its own asshole in the last couple of decades [...]

      Nice... LOL

    19. Re:What is with this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Every phenomina at a macro level must be something fundamentally different at its root.

      Color for instance. A macroscopic object is red, but down at the atomic level, things aren't "red", they simply absorb and emit photons of differing energies.

      Smell is another example. It may smell like "lemons" to you, but at the atomic level, it's about various molecules fitting into various receptors and stimulating nerve endings.

      There is always going to be this "bi polar disorder" between the mechanics at the lowest levels, and the emergent phenomina we experience at our level. Heat, cold, light, ... even gravity.

    20. Re:What is with this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good god, I had no idea that this part of the wiki existed. Thanks!

    21. Re:What is with this... by sg_oneill · · Score: 4, Informative

      But particle physics in particular seems to have vanished up its own asshole in the last couple of decades Every problem seems to be solved by inventing a new particle which will show up if only we spend ten times as much on the next machine

      That doesn't mean they are wrong however. As a physicist friend put it to me, "The more we study the universe the only thing we can be certain about it, is that the universe is actually very fucking wierd".

      --
      Excuse the Unicode crap in my posts. That's an apostrophe, and slashdot is busted.
    22. Re:What is with this... by adamofgreyskull · · Score: 5, Funny
      This is an incredibly relevant comedy sketch from Armstrong and Miller...

      Presenter:Science now and Britain's Einsteins are a-go-go over a new theory which is thought will revolutionise our understanding of Life, the Universe, and, pretty much, everything else. Heterotic supersymmetry is said to combine elements of String theory with a new take on...now hang on...[reading] "Quantum chromodynamics". Try saying that when you've had a few. And it's the brain-child of Professor Alan King. Er, Professor King, good morning.
      Physicist: Good morning.
      Presenter:Can you just..briefly...take us through this new theory of yours? In laymans terms.
      Physicist: No.
      Presenter:All I'm after is just a...a...a...broad stroke..explanation if you like.
      Physicist:Um...there isn't one.
      Presenter:O.k....well what if you were to..to..take us through the whole thing...starting with the real basics and just working our way up.
      Physicist:Oh! O.k...I can do that. It will take quite a long time.
      Presenter:How long?
      Physicist:11 years.
      Presenter: [finger to ear]Ok, I'm just being told we don't have quite that long. Professor, some of our viewers are quite smart...perhaps there's someone watching who's...capable of understanding your theory?
      Physicist:There isn't.
      Presenter:How can you be so sure?
      Physicist:Well, Graham's on holiday and Chung Yao's dead.
      Presenter:Professor King, thank you!
      Physicist:My pleasure.

    23. Re:What is with this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm a giant set of teeth um num num *bites u*

    24. Re:What is with this... by jpapon · · Score: 1

      Fantastic bit, thanks for that.

      --
      -- Let us endeavor so to live that when we pass even the undertaker shall be sorry. -- M. Twain
    25. Re:What is with this... by zero.kalvin · · Score: 1

      Under what assumption are you considering bipolar disorder disturbing ? Human ? The point is, as far as we know the universe might be one big jerk! If the universe is really indeed bipolar ( behaves differently at different scales ) then what is the problem ? Why are you trying to simplify things (or force them to be simple)? I'm not taking sides here, as a human being I would like it to be simple, but as a physicist I have to accept the universe as it is. I would rather much prefer to describe the whole Universe with one small equation. But that's probably never going to happen, and it's ok.

    26. Re:What is with this... by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      But particle physics in particular seems to have vanished up its own asshole in the last couple of decades

      But the bottom quark was theorized in 1973...

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    27. Re:What is with this... by zero.kalvin · · Score: 1

      OOps, I misunderstood the last part of your sentence.

    28. Re:What is with this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So implicit that we call ourselves "nature"?

    29. Re:What is with this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      that suddenly, miraculously, the Standard Model will become a thing of breathtakingly elegant simplicity and great descriptive and predictive power

      To be fair, whatever its deficiencies in other areas, the standard model has had great predictive power.

    30. Re:What is with this... by edumacator · · Score: 1

      Complex problems require complex descriptions; not everything can be reduced to a sound bite.

      Something tells me you aren't a politician.

    31. Re:What is with this... by drolli · · Score: 2

      Please join them. I am sure they will be delighted if you can, by your genius, propose simpler and cheaper tests for simpler theories which explain all previous observations - why didn't they think about this before? The answer is: they thought about it before. The amount of theories which have been proposed and already excluded is incredible.

    32. Re:What is with this... by TheRaven64 · · Score: 2

      Not really. Any sufficiently complex system begins to exhibit emergent behaviours which are fundamentally different to its normal behaviour. When you focus on the detail, you see something very different to when you look at an entire system. What we perceive as touch, pressure, and so on is just an emergent behaviour of electrostatic repulsion. There's no reason to suppose that this is limited in either direction - that the properties that we detect at the micro scale are not emergent behaviours of smaller and simpler systems, or that the properties that we perceive at the macro scale do not give rise to emergent properties at an even larger scale.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    33. Re:What is with this... by trout007 · · Score: 1

      Funny. I feel like that when trying to teach economics on /.

      --
      I love Jesus, except for his foreign policy.
    34. Re:What is with this... by Arrow_Raider · · Score: 1

      Most physics and math pages on the main Wikipedia are incomprehensible. Try this out for size: http://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supersymmetry

    35. Re:What is with this... by Ravon+Rodriguez · · Score: 2

      This isn't a fundamental difference between macroscopic and microscopic; what it boils down to is human perception. We exist in the macroscopic world, so we perceive things thusly. Quantum "weirdness" doesn't just happen on the microscopic scale, but the odds of a quantum event being observed macroscopically would equal the odds of the same quantum event happening simultaneously to every particle of a macroscopic object (quantum tunneling is the event that comes immediately to mind). The world doesn't change just because we're in it, regardless of what new-age pseudo-scientists would have you believe.

      --
      Jesus loves me, he loves me a bunch, because he always puts Jiffy in my lunch.
    36. Re:What is with this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      "Theoretical physics" (real science)

      vs

      "Economics" (invented so that astrologers have someone to look down on).

    37. Re:What is with this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Maybe you didn't understand what I am saying. At large scales, there are useful approximations that drive the dominant behavior at that scale. For instance, when there are ~mole of atoms, thermodynamics and continuum approximations to matter are accurate and useful. When there are only 5 atoms, however, a continuum model is pointless (thermo may actually still be valid). Are you trying to claim that the continuum approximation is valid at this range (it is most certainly, demonstrably, not)? Or that it is not valid at "macroscopic" range (have fun doing any real work with real solids, ever)?

      The microscopic theory, at large scales, has certain simplifying approximations that are valid. I was not claiming that physics is somehow "different" at larger scales, just that there are very good (simplifying) theories at different scales. Remember, we don't have a TOE. Even if we did, it still makes sense to use Newtonian mechanics when modelling a gyroscope. QM is certainly valid, but nobody uses it on large scale objects (it would be much too hard).

    38. Re:What is with this... by ultranova · · Score: 1

      Funny. I feel like that when trying to teach economics on /.

      Now the question remains: is that because you're Alan King, or because you're Edwin J. Goodwin?

      For most "economics teachers" on Slashdot and elsewhere it's the latter.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    39. Re:What is with this... by Oligonicella · · Score: 1

      You're missing the point. It's not the complexity (although inventing dimensions and pretending they exist is childish), it's the money. His pointing out that the experiments their solutions call for are ghastly in expense. This is a truth.

      The question at this juncture is, is the continued near exponential growth of the machinery worth what can be learned? Can that knowledge be put to use in a way that will recoup the billion dollar investments?

      It's a legitimate concern and the math boys need to come to grips with the fact that their halcyon days of spending are over.

    40. Re:What is with this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In fact, it is cosmology that is the driving force there... dark matter and dark energy. Both are currently believed by the "consensus" but we all know history is not kind to things once "generally believed to be true." Reducing the parameter space for super symmetry also has a knock off effect on string theory too... another darling.

    41. Re:What is with this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Infinity is not limited to the Real numbers you ignoramus!

    42. Re:What is with this... by Surt · · Score: 0

      Our universe is doomed. Unless we come to an understanding of how to escape to the multiverse outside, humanity will end. If you believe in the continuation of our species, there is really no expense that can't be justified in understanding and attempting to escape our current situation.

      And from a more practical point of view, a better understanding of the mechanics of the universe might lead to cheaper ways to do fusion, which would unlock our economies from the chains of expensive fuels.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    43. Re:What is with this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what does your comment even mean? no clue what you're going on about.

    44. Re:What is with this... by FooAtWFU · · Score: 1

      Hey, now. There are two broad parts of economics: microeconomics and macroeconomics. The former deals with individual decisions and trade-offs, while the latter tries to talk about the entire economy all at once. Microeconomics is a solid piece of work, and contains a variety of theories which can be (and have been) tested with a fair amount of rigor -- at least, as much rigor as you can ever have when dealing with human decision-making.

      On the other hand, even my family Ph.D. economist calls macroeconomics "basically voodoo". And policy prescriptions based on macroeconomic theory...

      --
      The World Wide Web is dying. Soon, we shall have only the Internet.
    45. Re:What is with this... by cowboy76Spain · · Score: 1

      IMHO the difference is in the expectations of the public.

      The general public listens of "Software Engineering" and thinks of complicated systems on complicated computers. So, first they are bareyly interested and even if they read the report, when they find that it gets complicated they are already expecting it. In the other hand, script kiddies are the one who are more vocal when saying "you do not need any of these complicated theories to do the work".

      With physics, there are lots of people who are uninterested but there is also a huge chunk of people who remembers what they were taught at the school (newtonian mechanics, Mendeleiev's periodic table). They were taught some simple and elegant theories. Later they read things like changing the state by observing a particle or that an element ma be both particle and wave and their reaction is that it is not as beatiful as what they were told.

      My take? Our brains evolved for eons so we get to eat some other species while not geting ate ourselves. Supposing that we can use that same tool to explore what is immensely great or ridiculously small and thinking that it will make sense is perhaps too much optimistism.

      --
      Why can't /. have a rich-text editor? Editing your own HTML is so XXth century.
    46. Re:What is with this... by cowboy76Spain · · Score: 2

      But particle physics in particular seems to have vanished up its own asshole in the last couple of decades Every problem seems to be solved by inventing a new particle which will show up if only we spend ten times as much on the next machine

      That doesn't mean they are wrong however. As a physicist friend put it to me, "The more we study the universe the only thing we can be certain about it, is that the universe is actually very fucking wierd".

      I woult put it better as "the more we are studying in orders of magnitude different to those to which our brains were evolved for, the more difficult is for our brain to understand the concepts involved".

      --
      Why can't /. have a rich-text editor? Editing your own HTML is so XXth century.
    47. Re:What is with this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hm?

    48. Re:What is with this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But software engineering is an abstraction of an obvious physical process and it is becoming more and more apparent that much of physics is an abstraction of an abstraction of an abstraction of a postulated physical process. Big difference.

    49. Re:What is with this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No most of them are just ignored along with any data that does not conform to the most popular theories. If it fits the models prediction it is a breakthrough proving its predictive power, if it does not conform it is discarded as an anomaly chalked up to measurement error. The confirmation bias at work in today's most popular theories is astounding.

    50. Re:What is with this... by Parlyne · · Score: 1

      The total cost of the LHC (which is shared among something like 25 countries) is about 2 years worth of US tax subsidies for oil companies.

    51. Re:What is with this... by Parlyne · · Score: 1

      Not even close. Every time there is even the slightest hint of a signal that might be an indication of physics outside that which is already confirmed to be true (even when those hints don't even come close to sufficient statistical significance to believe) there will be a burst of several dozen new theory papers proposing models to explain the effect on the off chance that it might turn out to be true. The thing is, if you're a theorist, you want to be the first to come up with the ideas that end up getting confirmed; and, usually, to do that, you also end up proposing a whole bunch of ideas that turn out to be wrong. The point is, most supposed anomalous measurements really do turn out to either be statistical fluctuations that go away as you collect more data, or systematic effects that turn out to be correctly explained in terms of properties of the experimental apparatus or mistakes in the data analysis.

    52. Re:What is with this... by kyrsjo · · Score: 1

      And as an accelerator physcisist, I say bring it on :)

    53. Re:What is with this... by mangu · · Score: 1

      have you ever noticed how fast any programming-related discussion here becomes an exchange of jargon?

      I've noticed that when someone tries to explain why Ruby is better than Python.

    54. Re:What is with this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I thought that was Dirac talking to a local radio station.

    55. Re:What is with this... by Ganthor · · Score: 1

      "Everything should be made as simple as possible, but not simpler."
      - Albert Einstein

    56. Re:What is with this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is something deeply disturbing in the heads of physicists...

      Sounds like you haven't attempted to read any work of modern mathematicians.

    57. Re:What is with this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The question at this juncture is, is the continued near exponential growth of the machinery worth what can be learned? Can that knowledge be put to use in a way that will recoup the billion dollar investments?

      Does one want a coherent image of the universe or not, that is the question. Practical experiments reap away the nonsense and leave the things worth pursuing. The effort itself and the multitude of experiments are producing input to other basic sciences and technology similarly to ISS and the space shuttle, which have also been controversial experiments.
        A basic problem is the energy required and the machinery required to control that energy when researching very small "things." (or going space with heavy loads) The exponentials spawn from that naturally. If the amounts of energies could be generated, controlled and measured without such amounts of superconducting magnets and house-sized multilayered detectors, the work would be cheaper. The human effort to invent, design and perform the experiments is still required.
        The "math boys" have not traditionally been the people spending the biggest amounts of money, the "nuke boys" have.

    58. Re:What is with this... by ravenshrike · · Score: 1

      No, not really. If you're working with quantum physics and you don't have to roll a SAN check, you're not doing it right. Whereas with computer logic, once you know what the fuck everything means it makes sense. It's just that learning what everything means and holding it in relation to everything else can be difficult. Quantum physics on the other hand literally is illogical in how it works, even though we have the math to describe it some of the time.

    59. Re:What is with this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Quantum physics on the other hand literally is illogical in how it works, even though we have the math to describe it some of the time.

      Quantum mechanics is not illogical in any literal sense. It is quite structured with a lot of things following logically from simple principles. The issue is that everyday experiences of how objects interact are often inapplicable, but there is no reason one should expect such experiences are universal to all scale levels and situations.

    60. Re:What is with this... by lennier · · Score: 1

      >That doesn't mean they are wrong however.

      No, it doesn't mean they are wrong, but it does tingle the intuitive "beauty vs ugliness" detector, which historically seems to have had some linkage to physical reality. Theories like Newton's and Maxwell's have a simplicity and coherence to them beyond their mere physical predictions which might be just a coincidence. Or it might be a clue that somehow, 20th century physics has diverged onto a track where its foundations are not quite correct, but we're now so deeply entrenched in a model-centric world of theory that we can't yet see our way to the beautiful solution which will tie it all together.

      Renormalising away infinities, brrr. That makes my "this shit ain't right" detector beep at full strength, and Feynman thought so too.

      But just the gut sense that something is deeply wrong in the Standard Model because of its ugly clunkiness isn't quite enough. It does after all do the brute work of coming up with the right numbers. So did Ptolemaic epicycles, even though it wasn't elegant or ultimately as insightful as the Copernican heliocentric model.

      I'm sure that somehow, we're missing something as big, simple and retrospectively obvious as "put the big bright thing in the middle", but I have no clue what the big bright thing might be. Einstein tried messing with time and that got him only so far and then he stalled out with Unified Field Theory. The best minds of a century have tried and failed. Once we get it, we'll probably laugh and teach it to five year olds. But until then...

      --
      You are not a brain: http://books.google.com/books?id=2oV61CeDx-YC
    61. Re:What is with this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      language, data structure, API, string, alphanumeric -- good examples of everyday programming jargon (yes, the term language have different meaning to us, and to a non-technical person).

    62. Re:What is with this... by schroedingers_hat · · Score: 1

      I have this theory that noone sane can even begin to comprehend modern physics, that's why they give undergrad physics students a heavy course load -- in hopes that they'll have a nervous breakdown and thus be ready for the next step.

    63. Re:What is with this... by trout007 · · Score: 1

      The problem with macroeconomics is that it takes everything that is well established in micro and messes it up instead of just expanding it. I think Austrian Economics does the best job at expanding it to explain macroscopic effects.

      When you get things like paradox of thirft or liquidity trap it becomes voodoo.

      --
      I love Jesus, except for his foreign policy.
    64. Re:What is with this... by rufty_tufty · · Score: 1

      I'd take another point of view.
      I swear there were a few days when the maths of quantum mechanics made sense to me, for a short while I stopped trying to build a mental physical picture of how it worked and just followed the maths and it was wonderfully simple. You could see these equations describing the behaviour from which would emerge the world we see, it was quite amazing.
      Then I passed that exam and promptly forgot it all.
      The point being that from my experience there is no point trying to marry the macro world with the micro world, just like above the ocean is a totally different world from below it. It may all play be the same rules and there be no duality but to expect the model of the world that the human mind constructs for itself to work on all levels is like expecting my model car to work just like the real thing.
      I just wish people would stop expecting the subatomic world to behave like they expect, it kind of reminds me of a fish denying the existence of fire.

      --
      "The weirdest thing about a mind, is that every answer that you find, is the basis of a brand new cliche" -
    65. Re:What is with this... by rufty_tufty · · Score: 1

      I disagree, Quantum mechanics is not illogical, it is merely not like the world we experience. It is a model of the world that is not like the model that our brains have made for us.
      I'm sure a Cow sees eating meat as illogical, I'm certain a dolphin can't conceive of the concept of fire. That a queen can't understand that if there is no bread why you just can't eat some cake.
      Sure the sub atomic world is outside our experience but that doesn't mean that it is wrong, in fact i would argue that is far more right than the world you and I perceive.

      --
      "The weirdest thing about a mind, is that every answer that you find, is the basis of a brand new cliche" -
    66. Re:What is with this... by rufty_tufty · · Score: 1

      I'd ask a higher question: "What else are we going to do? What else is humanity for?"
      The answer could be nothing at all, but in that case we need to pick a purpose for ourselves. The answer we pick could be to breed and spread ourselves as much as possible, but then the beetles have us beat there so we need another one how about the purpose we chose for humanity is "to produce art and understand the universe."
      Okay I picked my answer myself there, but if not to breed as much as possible, then what answer to the point of life that you can come up with does not require the better understanding of the workings of the universe?
      Previous generations have us the Mona-Lisa and Calculus and The Bohr model. Why shouldn't we pass on the results of the LHC?

      --
      "The weirdest thing about a mind, is that every answer that you find, is the basis of a brand new cliche" -
    67. Re:What is with this... by lennier · · Score: 1

      Our universe is doomed. Unless we come to an understanding of how to escape to the multiverse outside, humanity will end.

      You know, kind of by definition, there is no such thing as an "outside" to a universe. If it's connected to something else, it's not the whole verse, it's just a part-y-verse.

      Mmm, partyverse.

      --
      You are not a brain: http://books.google.com/books?id=2oV61CeDx-YC
    68. Re:What is with this... by Surt · · Score: 1

      Yes, unfortunately 'the universe' is commonly conflated with 'the multiverse'. The reason is historical: we used to think everything our telescopes could see was it, but now theory suggests there is more. But the term has stuck as the definition of all the galaxies resulting from the big bang, and there IS NO SUBSTITUTE TERM IN COMMON USAGE for that collection.

      So universe/multiverse is what we're stuck with for now.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    69. Re:What is with this... by Surt · · Score: 1

      Whoever moderated this troll needs some lessons in thermodynamics.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
  4. Sounds like it's time to rethink again by Walkingshark · · Score: 1

    Sounds like it's time for another rethink then. Einstein got his insights from observing things in the real world, a lot of modern theory seems to be based on looking at Math. Maybe it's time to spend some time in the physical world again and to step away from the Platonic realm and see if something sparks some inspiration.

    I, for one, wonder what we might learn if we try to model things using integer math instead of the often rounded real numbers that seem to be popular. Of course, with the numbers being so large you run into factoring issues pretty quickly but hey, that's what quantum computers are for right? :)

    --
    The world you experience is only a close approximation of reality.
    1. Re:Sounds like it's time to rethink again by JoshuaZ · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Sounds like it's time for another rethink then. Einstein got his insights from observing things in the real world, a lot of modern theory seems to be based on looking at Math. Maybe it's time to spend some time in the physical world again and to step away from the Platonic realm and see if something sparks some inspiration.

      First of all, Einstein was famous for doing very clever thought experiments. Many of his ideas about special relativity came from thinking about how objects should behave if they tried to chase light. Second, the ideas of supersymmetry in fact come from inspiration of what we see in reality. In particular, supersymmetry has been posited to explain a number of different strange results, most importantly the apparent discrepancy of dark matter (that is, that the universe seem to have a lot of mass that we can't see).

      I, for one, wonder what we might learn if we try to model things using integer math instead of the often rounded real numbers that seem to be popular. Of course, with the numbers being so large you run into factoring issues pretty quickly but hey, that's what quantum computers are for right? :)

      We use the real numbers to model things because they do a really good job. One could try to just model a universe where the base field was the rational numbers (that is, ratios of integers) but that would have a lot of problems. For example, you won't be able to make a square with a diagonal connecting two corners. Moreover, for most purposes, calculations that can be done in the reals can be done with limits of rational numbers (in fact one way of rigorously defining the real numbers defines real numbers as special limits of rationals called Cauchy sequences. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cauchy_sequence. I'm not at all sure why you think the difficulty of factoring integers is relevant in this context. For most practical calculations, you very rarely need to factor integers. Moreover, while it is true that quantum computers can in theory factor integers quickly using Shor's algorithm http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shor's_algorithm, for all we know it might be possible for standard computers to factor quickly. Moreover, the models we use to talk about quantum computing rely very heavily on the real numbers which you aren't happy with.

    2. Re:Sounds like it's time to rethink again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, actually Einstein got his insights by reading about E=MC2 as written by Olinto De Pretto.

    3. Re:Sounds like it's time to rethink again by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 2

      Thanks for this clear and cogent post. A lot of /.ers who aren't physicists (i.e., the vast majority of us) seem to really enjoy beating up on modern physics for some reason, and one of the most common complaints is "it's all math, there's no connection to reality any more." It's good to see a reminder that (a) a lot of physics has always been math, (b) there's still plenty of experimental work generating interesting real-world observations which the math is necessary to describe, and (c) the math that's used is pretty damn good at describing the way things work.

      --
      The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
    4. Re:Sounds like it's time to rethink again by guybrush3pwood · · Score: 1
      Olinto looks

      looks like a young Stalin.

      --
      Perhaps I'm trolling, perhaps I'm not.
    5. Re:Sounds like it's time to rethink again by tyrione · · Score: 1

      I assume you want to include Complex Numbers in there with Reals when studying Quantum Theory, correct?

    6. Re:Sounds like it's time to rethink again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let's bang things together a little while with this new LHC thingy before we start building new theories. Who knows what we'll find.

      Best way to get started is by banging two stones together.

    7. Re:Sounds like it's time to rethink again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Complex numbers per se are not needed. In QM (and everywhere else, the formulation is equivalent), one could just see them as shorthand for specific matrix structures (a+bi = [a, -b; b, a], {a,b} real) that we can't seem to do without in even simple descriptions involving time evolution. Or actually, one _could_ mostly do without it, but that would mean trigonometric functions beyond belief in calculating all the problems where we now just slap an "i" (or "j").

      Look at electrical engineering and alternating current: imaginary numbers are introduced to simplify differential equations concerning time evolution. Some people phrase it as "nature is actually complex" when they explain why imaginary numbers are needed. I would rather say "nature is often oscillatory through time, and complex numbers encode all this behaviour in a simple unit".

      Anyway: real numbers _and matrices_ (with our defined calculatory rules) would be enough to describe the universe (obviously overstated, but it would be enough to not need imaginary numbers at least). The matrices might get infinite (hi Hilbert!), but physicists usually don't take too much notice of this (hi SUSY/QFT!).

    8. Re:Sounds like it's time to rethink again by trout007 · · Score: 1

      You should check out Universal Geometry and Rational Trigonometry. By redefining length and angle you can greatly simplify geometry where all problems are solvable by algebra without trig functions. Very cool.

      http://web.maths.unsw.edu.au/~norman/YouTube.htm#WildTrig

      --
      I love Jesus, except for his foreign policy.
    9. Re:Sounds like it's time to rethink again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Congratulations, use the most famous thought experiment practitioner in physics to argue for physical world stuff.Yo thought that out well.

    10. Re:Sounds like it's time to rethink again by modmans2ndcoming · · Score: 1

      your argument seems to allude to you sucking at math.

    11. Re:Sounds like it's time to rethink again by Guignol · · Score: 1

      Uh ?
      Hello Hermite ?
      Hello Pauli ? Heisenberg ?
      Hello Dirac ? (say hi to the positron)
      Am I missing something ?

    12. Re:Sounds like it's time to rethink again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Integers for Pi and e won't get you very far, other than engineer jokes.

    13. Re:Sounds like it's time to rethink again by mbkennel · · Score: 1

      "Am I missing something ?"

      Yes. The original poster is describing mathematical equivalences. Since complex numbers happen to be so useful, humans have special notation for them which simplifies manipulations. Hermite, Pauli, Heisenberg and Dirac all knew about both matrices and complex numbers and used both.

    14. Re:Sounds like it's time to rethink again by m50d · · Score: 1

      The causal sets approach to quantum gravity is based on a universe without real numbers (essentially, we assume spacetime is a scattering of discrete points). Of course, it has no experimental evidence and makes fewer predictions than the likes of string theory or LCG.

      --
      I am trolling
    15. Re:Sounds like it's time to rethink again by Guignol · · Score: 1

      Hmmm no, sorry I probably didn't word it correctly, but this is the part I didn't miss.
      I was trying to say that I disagree with this part and hinted at counter examples where dealing with complex numbers 'per se' (instead of as some sort of useful but still artificial tool) lead to deep insights/discoveries/predictions/... that would have been, indeed, very artificial if not counting on the 'complex nature of things' being manipulated.
      Assuming this was the argument, I was asking if I was missing something

    16. Re:Sounds like it's time to rethink again by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 1

      > First of all, Einstein was famous for doing very clever thought experiments.

      Thought experiment = oxymoron. You can't use that to PROVE anything about how the Real World functions.

      http://www.adras.com/WHY-SCIENCE-IS-NOT-PART-OF-CULTURE.t20933-91-2.html

      Einstein used "thought experiments" for two main purposes.
        One was to *explain* the consequences of a proposed tenet, postulate, or model. The consequences then are presumably testable.
      - The other was to show how an imagined outcome is consistent with known laws of physics or are consistent with other statements in the theory.

    17. Re:Sounds like it's time to rethink again by Savantissimo · · Score: 1

      I agree that imaginary/complex numbers are not needed per se, they mostly represent rotation or oscillation, but I don't think they are all that good as simplifying notation; rather, they obscure physical intuition. The same is true of most applications of matrices. (The Pauli matrices are particularly bad notation.) Geometric algebra can replace both complex numbers and matrices (and quaternions and tensors) in most situations while giving much better physical intuition. (Writing a library to handle geometric algebras invariably reverts to lots of matrix math under the hood, though.)
      (See the long post I made earlier today for links to GA references and resources.)

      --
      "Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?" - Patrick Henry
    18. Re:Sounds like it's time to rethink again by BiggerIsBetter · · Score: 1

      (that is, that the universe seem to have a lot of mass that we can't see)

      My guess is we need an experiment that lets us "see" 4 (or more) dimensional things.

      Imagine a flat-lander trying to figure out why his circle seems to pull other things towards it when he's not aware of the 3rd dimension which makes it a sphere with large mass... or why different circles of the same size behave differently, because he can't see how far through his 2D plane they are.

      If we can do that (and maybe we can't) then we'll be closer to making some sense of this invisible mass.

      --
      Forget thrust, drag, lift and weight. Airplanes fly because of money.
    19. Re:Sounds like it's time to rethink again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... also he was skilled at claiming credit for ideas he didn't actually come up with and similar dirty tricks. If you dig into his personal life a little you quickly discover he wasn't exactly a nice guy, nor quite as brilliant as generally supposed.

    20. Re:Sounds like it's time to rethink again by Walkingshark · · Score: 1

      Real numbers do seem to do a really good job at modeling things, except those models seem to break at very small and very large scales. It occurs to me that the precision you lose when you start chopping off repeating reals at some arbitrary decimal might have big effects somewhere in the bushes where you can't get a good look at them.

      I don't know, maybe it's time to abandon the coordinate plane entirely and start with something different.

      Which I guess is what I'm getting at. We use the math that we're comfortable with, but what if our models don't fit because the math that we use to build them is fundamentally incompatible with the Universe itself? As in, maybe the infinitely divisible coordinate plane are just shadows on the wall of Plato's cave.

      --
      The world you experience is only a close approximation of reality.
    21. Re:Sounds like it's time to rethink again by Walkingshark · · Score: 1

      Damnit. In that last sentence, it should read "is just a shadow on the wall of"

      --
      The world you experience is only a close approximation of reality.
    22. Re:Sounds like it's time to rethink again by Walkingshark · · Score: 1

      Pi is just a shortcut, though, to express something that is a close approximation of what actually exists.

      I'm not just questioning real numbers. In this thought experiment, we're throwing out circles too. There isn't any such thing anyways.

      The real question is, how long until we have enough computronium to begin modeling the reality that underlies what we currently use circles to represent and make our models computable in a reasonable amount of time.

      --
      The world you experience is only a close approximation of reality.
    23. Re:Sounds like it's time to rethink again by Walkingshark · · Score: 1

      Thanks for making sure I got my requisite baseless, pointless ad hominem.

      --
      The world you experience is only a close approximation of reality.
    24. Re:Sounds like it's time to rethink again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm a mature physics graduate student who has the good fortune to be involved in the experimental push in non-accelerator particle physics. Part of the process of designing experiments involves interactions with the Theoretical physicists- the purely math scholars- who are all eager for experimental results in order to refine their models. As the costs of new detectors continues to rise, experimentalists collaborate as much as possible with Theoreticians to establish design parameters that will return useful results.
      At a recent conference a theoretician said," While waiting for the results of the experiments proposed we have not been idle. We have gone a long ways towards parameterizing our ignorance."
      I suspect that exercise is one all us \. readers should follow before commenting.

    25. Re:Sounds like it's time to rethink again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Baseless? hardly....ad hominem? maybe, but not really.

      Your post shows your lack of ability to understand real number analysis and why is it useful. That fact illustrates that my attack is not baseless. as to the ad hominem claim...I was not attempting to defeat your argument by attacking you, thus an ad hominem is not really appropriate.

      Logic appears to be something you lack as well... it explains your crap math skills.

    26. Re:Sounds like it's time to rethink again by lennier · · Score: 1

      For example, you won't be able to make a square with a diagonal connecting two corners.

      Interestingly enough, we can't actually do that in the real world either - we don't have infinite pixels on a screen, or infinitely small whiteboard markers. Eventually you get down to atoms, and then quanta, and they seem very much like someone maxed out their numeric precision and started using integers.

      And yet reality seems to get along just fine.

      By the way, whyever do we call finite-precision floating point numbers in computers "reals"? They're no more real than I'm the square root of negative Pi.

      --
      You are not a brain: http://books.google.com/books?id=2oV61CeDx-YC
    27. Re:Sounds like it's time to rethink again by lennier · · Score: 1

      Thought experiment = oxymoron. You can't use that to PROVE anything about how the Real World functions.

      Not only that, Einstein was also famous for inventing so many thought experiments so rapidly that they contradicted each other. Try reading up on the history of GR. He confused himself lots of times, and then he spent 40 years working on Unified Field Theory which never came together. Possibly he wasn't completely misguided, but he never got it to work, and while everyone loves to celebrate the young 1905 Einstein, they forget that the old electric-shock-hair Einstein disagreed with not only his younger self but the rest of the physics community quite dramatically.

      The problem is that nobody in science loves a loser, and Old Einstein was a loser - at least according to his contemporaries.

      So if he didn't ultimately get things right - or if he did, he was so far outside the quantum mechanics mainstream by the 1950s as to be considered a crackpot if he didn't have his Nobel Prize - why do we treat him like an infallible demigod? Why don't we study his later UFT works, for instance - the ones which did try to take General Relativity to its logical conclusion?

      Because if he wasn't, ultimately, right about the conclusions of relativity, should we be so sure that its foundations are correct either?

      Einstein is an intriguing paradox. He invented the photon, but still held to the belief that reality was a continuum, and therefore that the photon had to be not an elementary particle but a wave. He didn't believe in wave-particle duality. He didn't believe in a lot of things which we now consider absolute sacrosanct physical truth. Why don't we teach this?

      --
      You are not a brain: http://books.google.com/books?id=2oV61CeDx-YC
  5. Maybe... by MrEricSir · · Score: 0

    ...the LHC itself is just an illusion!!!!11

    --
    There's no -1 for "I don't get it."
    1. Re:Maybe... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Inception was a bad movie, not a life choice.

    2. Re:Maybe... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mod parent up insightful!

  6. hmm by ThorGod · · Score: 1

    I seem to remember a physics colloquium speaker discussing the likely energies for the higgs-boson back in 2005-6. He made it sound unlikely that it would be seen at any of the energies created at the LHC. It could require a much, much more massive particle accelerator to find the HB.

    --
    PS: I don't reply to ACs.
    1. Re:hmm by JamesP · · Score: 1

      Not really

      It is my understanding that other accelerators excluded Higgs at a higher energy range (>180GEv) (not sure how they did that)

      --
      how long until /. fixes commenting on Chrome?
  7. ICP by MrEricSir · · Score: 2

    "Fucking Higgs Boson, why doesn't it work?"

    --
    There's no -1 for "I don't get it."
    1. Re:ICP by nschubach · · Score: 1

      Miracles!

      --
      Every time I start to have faith in humanity, I ruin it by driving to work between 7 and 8 am.
    2. Re:ICP by antifoidulus · · Score: 1

      "Fucking Higgs Boson, why doesn't it work?"

      Maybe because the hole is really, really tiny and really hard to find in the dark?

    3. Re:ICP by ravenshrike · · Score: 1

      Magnets!

  8. Re:Shortsightedness is a weakness by Rakshasa-sensei · · Score: 1

    Except this is the equivalent of having a round-earth hypothesis and finding that ships do not disappear behind the horizon.

  9. Re:Shortsightedness is a weakness by Baloroth · · Score: 5, Interesting

    How long did they think the world was flat again? And how long before that did they believe thunder was anger from the gods? And how long before that was fire worshiped as magic?

    About until the very most primitive scientists, until a semi-reasonable scientific explanation was found, and about the same as the other two, respectively. Seriously, one of the very first people to attempt science (the Greeks) knew the Earth was round, most of them knew thunder was a natural phenomenon but couldn't explain it, and they established fire as one of the four elements of nature (again: not magic but we just don't know how it works quite yet.)

    However, if an experiment created explicitly for (among other things) confirmation or refutation of Supersymmetry not only doesn't discover it, but discovers absolutely no sign of it and in fact contradicts it (which I believe these results do), then chances are it's time to go back to the drawing board. Or the math board, in this case.

    --
    "None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license." --John Milton
  10. Re:Shortsightedness is a weakness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    No no no! You go where the evidence takes you, no matter how much you liked the hypothesis.

  11. Re:Shortsightedness is a weakness by mfwitten · · Score: 3, Informative

    Around 240 BC, Eratosthenes calculated the circumference of the Earth to an error of less than 2%.

  12. Overstating by tylersoze · · Score: 2

    Calling SUSY "all but dead" is overstating the case just a little. *Minimal* SUSY appears to not fit the data, but that doesn't mean another version of SUSY might be the right answer. SUSY is one of those things, like string theory, that I think a lot of physicists are going to have a tough time letting go of until they are thoroughly disproven, assuming that ever happens. The problem is we're kind of getting to the point where it's hard to test these theories since it requires energies we have no hope of ever achieving in order to investigate them experimentally, unless we are clever and find other consequences of the theory at lower energies, like the B-meson decay.

    1. Re:Overstating by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I am a particle physicist (with no leanings for or against SUSY variants), and I have to agree totally. Calling SUSY "all but dead" is absurd, at this point.

      1. Minimal SUSY has had theoretical difficulties (without needing experimental difficulties) for more than a decade now.

      2. The SUSY ecosystem is really quite vast. In some sense, it's a shame that it has such a simple name/acronym. Minimal SUSY is really a rather uninteresting modification to the Standard Model, anyhow.

      3. The potential for the LHC to shed light on whole ranges of SUSY models (with or without an answer regarding the Higgs field) is understood by physicists to be something which is more likely to be tested (read: ruled out) at the 14 TeV center-of-mass scale.

      The decision run the LHC for two years and *then* upgrade in 2013 was made primarily because of the potential to bracket the Higgs at ~ 4 to 5 sigma with ~ 5 fb^-1 of collision data. Anyone who attended (or read slides from) Chamonix 2010 or 2011 can see this rather plainly.

    2. Re:Overstating by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have been trolled, have a nice day

    3. Re:Overstating by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wtf. The summary called MSSM dead. SUSY != MSSM, and "all but dead" is the opposite of "dead".

    4. Re:Overstating by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      "all but dead" is the opposite of "dead".

      From the Oxford dictionaries:

      all but

      1. very nearly:the subject was all but forgotten
      2. all except:we have support from all but one of the networks

      Here, the first definition applies.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    5. Re:Overstating by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, two definitions with almost opposite meanings? What a great idea! I don't see how this could go wrong.

    6. Re:Overstating by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    7. Re:Overstating by haruchai · · Score: 1

      Welcome to English. I would propose sanctions against words that have multiple, conflicting meanings but am afraid that too many would not sanction that idea.

      --
      Pain is merely failure leaving the body
  13. Re:Shortsightedness is a weakness by steelfood · · Score: 1

    It's one thing to fail because of religious, cultural, or whatever dogma hindering knowledge acquisition. It's a completely different thing when most professional, career scientists at the top of their field, pursuing the unknown while trying to remain as unbiased as possible, are calling it quits. the latter means that while there might be value in more experiments, that value is not enough to justify the cost, i.e. they'll revisit the idea if new evidence shows up in other experiments to warrant it.

    To put it another way, the most important test have been conducted, and the results are not favorable. If the theory still ends up being useful, it would only be useful for a few edge cases. And as such, it may not actually describe anything previously unknown.

    That having been said, it's not quite time to write off the Higgs quite yet. There's still a ways to go before the range of energy the Higgs is supposed to show up in is exhausted. You are talking about the Higgs when you say particle, right?

    --
    "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
  14. Supersymmetry or just Minimal Supersymmetry? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There's a range of possible supersymmetry schemes. Sure, considering minimal supersymmetry first, but if reality doesn't correspond, well, then perhaps all that's been excluded is minimal supersymmetry, the simplest possible way of extending the standard model with supersymmetry.

    Secondly, and suspiciously, otherwise quite complicated-looking 32-generator extended supersymmetry theories automagically include a graviton. And we do live in a universe with gravity, after all, so, um, maybe minimal supersymmetry was never the most likely really.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extended_supersymmetry

  15. Re:LIKE MY ASS CHEECKS !! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Taco's balls are not symmetrical. I've sucked them both and the left one is definitely larger.

    -Hemos

  16. Re:Shortsightedness is a weakness by NoNonAlphaCharsHere · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Please don't confuse the "Everybody thought the world was flat until Colombus!" crowd with facts. Telling them the ancient Greeks knew they were living on a sphere (from the shape of the shadow of the earth on the moon) won't disturb their firmly held articles of faith at all.

  17. Re:Shortsightedness is a weakness by sjames · · Score: 3

    It's not quite like that. We know that if this class of theory is correct the particles in question MUST exist and that they will be detectable in the given energy range by a known signature. They aren't there.

    So whatever theory is more correct will either not predict these particles or will predict them at an energy we have yet to reach.

    They went sailing for the edge of the world so they could hold a mirror over the edge and prove there was a turtle holding it up. Instead, they went all the way around and came back to the starting point, so the flat earth theory must be discarded.

  18. Re:Shortsightedness is a weakness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    First of all, just because it was well known that many people during the dark ages thought the earth was flat doesn't mean that the whole world thought the earth was flat. Nowadays because of the Internet everyone has the opportunity to learn the same knowledge, but back then you had portions of the world believing in different things. There were always people that knew the earth was a sphere, that knew it revolved around the sun, and that knew that physical matter was an illusion. The fact that their ideas weren't popular at the time doesn't mean that they weren't there. Much of what is being "discovered" now, was pretty much written a long time ago. Ancient theories about matter are now being verified, but what does that mean about how these theories were created?

  19. Re:Shortsightedness is a weakness by Oligonicella · · Score: 1

    If matter is illusion, please stand with your eyes closed and allow me to walk up behind you with a ball-peen hammer. Matter is axiomatically not illusion because it doesn't react to your perceptions, your perceptions react to it.

  20. Well if they keep having disagreements by backslashdot · · Score: 1

    If they keep having disagreements they are going to have to sort it with a mediator. Like maybe a neutral Z boson.

  21. Was it ever alive? by Urkki · · Score: 1

    FTFS: "and for all practical purposes, the Supersymmetric Extension of the Standard Model of Physics is dead."
    Was it ever alive for any practical purposes?

    1. Re:Was it ever alive? by JockTroll · · Score: 1

      And I didn't even know it was sick.

      --
      Geeks are so full of shit that "beating the crap out of them" takes a whole new meaning.
  22. Wait by 427_ci_505 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Has Netcraft confirmed that the model is dead?

  23. SUSY remains at the top, BBC article is shoddy by lumidek · · Score: 1, Interesting

    The BBC article is a piece of shoddy journalism. The LHC has moved the minimal energy at which new physics may occur to higher levels. However, it has done so not only with supersymmetry but with all other possible theories of new physics, see http://motls.blogspot.com/2011/08/supersymmetry-and-irrationality-of-bbc.html Supersymmetry remains the most viable candidate for new physics to be found. Only the constrained versions of the MSSM, the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model, have been ruled out for a priori sensible values of the parameters. But it's not even true that the whole MSSM has been eliminated. Many other non-SUSY models of new physics have been moved by the data to much higher energies than SUSY - which includes Kaluza-Klein and Randall-Sundrum gravitons, small black holes, leptoquarks, preons, and many others. It's just a flawed interpretation that the data so far present a case to switch from SUSY to something else. If something, they indicate that *no* new theory is needed to describe doable experiments.

  24. Re:Shortsightedness is a weakness by houghi · · Score: 1

    Why all this OR/OR thinking. You are for us OR against us. You are for a flat earth OR a round one. Here in Babel you speak one language OR another. This is such a negative attitude. Why not start having an AND/AND mentality?

    You can agree with some things AND dislike other.
    You can speak one language AND others.
    You can believe the earth is flat AND round. Just like a pizza.

    --
    Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
  25. Re:Shortsightedness is a weakness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If matter is illusion,

    Those religions never said it was an illusion, that's a mis-translation by someone with a very limited understanding. What they say, is that our perception of matter is an illusion. We understand and perceive the universe through the use of metaphor and symbolism, and it was an understanding that the Model of Reality each of us stores in our skulls bears very little resemblance to what is actually going on.

  26. Supersymmetry not dead... by forand · · Score: 0

    Supersymmetry was not proposed to provide a possible dark matter particle. Supersymmetry grew out of attempts to reduce the needed parameters of the standard model, e.g. to explain the weak scale. It was only later that it was noticed that the lightest supersymmetric particles could make ideal dark matter particles. Furthermore, current LHC results most certainly do NOT rule out supersymmetry. The measurements have just reduced the allowed phase space for certain realizations of the theory.

    Finally, experimentalists never have the last word on whether a theory is truly dead or not. Theorist have shown time and time again that they are capable of coming up with novel ways of saving a theory. Only when the theory requires something which is then falsified does a theory die (or it becomes too complex relative to other theories). That has not happened. Even the BBC article includes lots of hedging.

    1. Re:Supersymmetry not dead... by rossdee · · Score: 2

      Its not dead, just resting...

      (and pining for the fiords )

  27. Re:Shortsightedness is a weakness by KiloByte · · Score: 1

    If you want to be strict here, please mind the distinction between XOR and OR :p

    --
    The creatures outside looked from Alt-Right to Antifa; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
  28. Re:Shortsightedness is a weakness by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

    and they established fire as one of the four elements of nature

    you don't get any points for being wrong.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  29. Supersymmetry and irrationality of the BBC by Freddybear · · Score: 1

    http://motls.blogspot.com/2011/08/supersymmetry-and-irrationality-of-bbc.html

    The BBC has placed supersymmetry next to the carbon dioxide and the AGW "deniers" as the ultimate enemies of Gaia. A would-be journalist, Mr Pallab Ghosh, chose this title:

            LHC results put supersymmetry theory 'on the spot'

    The reality is that after 2/fb or so (pronounce: "two inverse femtobarns") that have been analyzed by each major detector of the LHC, no sign of new physics has been detected. It's still a beginning of the experiment and the total number of collisions inside the LHC will grow by orders of magnitude and the energy will be doubled, too. Each year of operation will have a comparable to chance to find something new as the first year. Or just a little bit smaller.

    It's because the total amount of energy deposited in the final products of the LHC inelastic collisions is growing more or less exponentially and new physics has a pretty much uniform chance to emerge at the logarithmic energy scale.

    It's the beginning but the LHC has already falsified many particular models with new phenomena predicted below 1 TeV or so - or, more precisely, with new phenomena visible in the first two inverse femtobarns. There have been lots of papers talking about possible observations in this region because many people liked things "behind the corner" that could have been a recipe for a quick journey to fame. It didn't work. ;-)

    The experiments have surely not "punished" supersymmetry more than any other bottom-up theory even though many ignorant and deluded laymen such as Mr Ghosh are self-evidently obsessed with this utter misconception...

    1. Re:Supersymmetry and irrationality of the BBC by geniice · · Score: 1

      While the article may have a few razor thin points that can be put down to the BBC needing to make the article human readable the author's attempt to fit in some many political digs rather destroys their credibility.

  30. Re:Shortsightedness is a weakness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You don't even have to go back to the ancient Greeks - the Europeans knew the world was a sphere. The Italians were making globes 200 years before Columbus set sail, so it was obviously known already at that time. The educated of nearly every society since the ancient Egyptians knew the world was spherical - only the uneducated thought it was flat.

  31. Re:Shortsightedness is a weakness by martas · · Score: 1

    Then you never get any points, because you will pretty much always be wrong; or at least this is the view taken in science. You'd be hard pressed to find any serious scientist who thinks any sort of absolute truth can really be discovered. That makes your point system pointless (if you will forgive the pun).

  32. was going off the reporter's words by decora · · Score: 1

    The original link in the Pallab Ghosh article (removed at edit time) was for this story:

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-14680570

    "Results from the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) have all but killed the simplest version of an enticing theory of sub-atomic physics."

  33. Re:Shortsightedness is a weakness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Shut up, we can't let secular humanists discover that people weren't moronic flat earthers before secular humanism was created. They might throw a tantrum.

  34. admittedly, i am old and grumpy by decora · · Score: 1

    This is from the article you linked to:

    "Eminent SUSY phenomenologists Gordon Kane told the following to the SUSY-hating Marxist blogger Tommaso Dorigo:"

    " it's just a flawed idea to ask experimenters - such as the CMS boss Mr Jordan Nash - about "our understanding". He doesn't seem to have too deep an understanding of the parameter spaces of supersymmetric theories. This is not a surprising criticism; he is an experimenter, after all. . . . Mr Ghosh shouldn't have asked experimenters about theoretical questions."

    "Maybe Nature abhors the huge percentage of leftists in the current Academia so She won't give them any new and important secrets to be discovered - and She will give the last secrets to the last conservative white males on the periphery of the institutionalized science only. "

    "most typical SUSY opponents are old and grumpy hippie assholes "

    "Mr Ghosh should splash himself down the drain because his work is a pile of garbage."

    1. Re:admittedly, i am old and grumpy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This (the linked page) is by Lubos Motl (and I suspect the GP is too) who is renowned for being rather touchy. He gets very angry when people disagree with him, and throws insults rather than arguments. It's quite sad really - if you look through his blog for long enough you'll see plenty of racism, sexism, anti-global warming propaganda with nothing scientific to back it up, and a lot of screaming directed, for some reason, at people like Sabine Hossenfelder and Lee Smolin, two well respected physicists with whom Lubos disagrees.

      The sad part is that he's really a very smart guy and well informed within his own little area of theory. If he ever learned diplomacy he could be quite a good scientist, but as it stands he really doesn't take the time to understand other ideas than his own, instead attempting to childishly ridicule what he doesn't understand. I believe that the character of Sheldon on the Big Bang theory was in part based upon Lubos.

  35. Re:Shortsightedness is a weakness by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

    To be fair, the uneducated accounted for about 95% of the population in the time period that you're discussing. Literacy levels were very low, and the Catholic church was working hard to maintain this.

    --
    I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  36. Re:Shortsightedness is a weakness by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

    Thinking of fire as an element doesn't get you anything, and in fact, leads you in the wrong direction, and thus it's wrong; whereas we may find that our view of elements with certain atomic weights is simplistic but it lets us do useful work and therefore it's right enough.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  37. Re:Shortsightedness is a weakness by martas · · Score: 1

    I'm assuming you know the history of ancient Greek science well, and know for a fact that their view of fire as an "element" had absolutely no practically useful implications; otherwise I'm sure you wouldn't make that statement with such conviction.

    Still though, what's your point? Good science is the process of proposing theories and verifying them with evidence. Of course the theories are going to end up being wrong eventually, and very often won't be practically useful. How would you propose evaluating the work of a modern day theoretical physicist? Based on how much people 2000 years from now agree with it? I think you'd find that metric to be rather unenlightening, as the answer almost always would be "not at all". Based on the practical applications of that work? The vast majority of theoretical physicists would be dead by the time you gave them any grade above F, including the good ones.

  38. Re:Shortsightedness is a weakness by modmans2ndcoming · · Score: 1

    Except that the educated people of Europe did NOT believe the world was flat.... it was known that the world was round by anyone who was able to study Aristotle and Mathematics.

    In the future I am sure people will say something like "and how long did they think the world was only 6000 years old?"

  39. Re:News Flash! Taco is GONE! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dammit, another sex related injury! Get in the er-line, right after the bleeders and broken-lamp-in-their-ass cases. We'll get to you eventually. Meanwhile, put some clean bandage over it after cooling and sterilizing it. Don't let it go wet.
    --
    Your neighborhood hospital sexER male-nurse

  40. mod parent up Insightful +5 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A physicist who can actually explain it in English

  41. I don't always read posts bashing SUSY... by surveyork · · Score: 1

    ... but when I do, I head over to http://www.math.columbia.edu/~woit/wordpress/ (Not Even Wrong).

    --
    2019 is going to be the year of Linux on the desktop.
    1. Re:I don't always read posts bashing SUSY... by ginbot462 · · Score: 1

      Oooh.. I want to try.

      I don't always use multiple inheritance ... but when I do I use pure abstract interfaces.

      --
      Atlas Shrugged : Thematic Story :: Battlefield Earth : Organized Religion
  42. Re:Shortsightedness is a weakness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Those evil catholic monks who were busy copying books by hand were part of the catholic church conspiracy to keep litteracy down.

  43. Re:Shortsightedness is a weakness by The+Dawn+Of+Time · · Score: 1

    Don't worry, we're already getting enough laughter out of the moronic sky fairy worship. You can have this one.

  44. Re:Shortsightedness is a weakness by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

    In the future I am sure people will say something like "and how long did they think the world was only 6000 years old?"

    Well, so far it's been less than 400 years. Archbishop Ussher came up with that bit of academic idiocy in 1650....

    --

    "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
  45. Dedekind Cuts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The irrational numbers are usually rigorously defined by partitioning the rational numbers using Dedekind cuts (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dedekind_cut).

    1. Re:Dedekind Cuts by JoshuaZ · · Score: 1

      Dedekind cuts and Cauchy sequences both give you the same thing. Which one uses is a matter of preference. Dedekind cuts are a slightly more elementary way of doing it (and thus are often pedagogically favored) whereas Cauchy sequences allow a generalization to well behaved metric spaces. Thus for example, if one wants to construct the p-adic numbers http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/P-adic_numbers then one can't apply Dedekind cuts (because there's no order) but one can apply Cauchy sequences (because there's a metric).

  46. Rejoice! by Snaller · · Score: 1

    Because today science found that something IS NOT - and that can be removed from the list of things to try to find WHAT IS. The very basic nature of science; test;observe;conclude.

    As opposed to religion which starts at conclude and then everything else has to fit that.

    --
    If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
  47. Using a trowel and tweezers.. by Paracelcus · · Score: 1

    To build a steel suspension bridge is what existing mathematical models are to the more subtle, esoteric minutia of standard model theories! The physical sciences need a different modeling language to visualize, extrapolate, interpret and explore these regions where it appears that mysteries still abound.

    --
    I killed da wabbit -Elmer Fudd
  48. mostly no rethinking by rubycodez · · Score: 1

    There are a few supersymmetry models, many pop up in string theory. No rethinking of mainstream theories necessary from these results.

  49. not Higgs Boson related by rubycodez · · Score: 1

    The Higgs is part of the standard model, while various supersymmetry models exist. This is not a blow to any mainstream model

  50. Re:Leads to some interesting questions, then. by rubycodez · · Score: 1

    you do realize the many supersymmetric models aren't necessary for the Standard Model? this result proves nothing about anything but that a particular subset of ss is not born out by experiment

  51. Re:Shortsightedness is a weakness by modmans2ndcoming · · Score: 1

    My point is that "we" do not think that... a small group of morons who are out of the main stream believe it, and really, you can only count the last 100 years or so since definitive evidence of the age or the earth was not possible until radiometric dating was available.

  52. What's old is new again by Maury+Markowitz · · Score: 1

    I recall when supersymmetry was all the rage, to the point where axial jets in Fermilab were considered evidence that the only way forward was susy. The beauty of its solution to the hierarchy problem demanded attention, and lacking any other contenders there was a significant level of "well, this has to be it!". Then by the late 80's, the lack of any evidence for susy partners right in the middle of the rich bands made it sort of fade into the background. By then superstrings were all the rage.

    So here we are another 20 years later and superstrings (sorry, "m-theory") is apparently in the same process of dying a slow death. And then along comes LHC. Now no one really knows what it's going to find, if anything, except for the desperate hope it will find the Higgs so they can hand out some more Nobel's. But with m-theory silent (or more accurately, screaming too loudly), and huge holes in the energy levels between the top and LHC, suddenly supersymmetry re-appears. Not because there's any reason to believe it mind you, it's just that there's nothing else in the energy hole that LHC can hit that we could actually test.

  53. Obligatory by gd2shoe · · Score: 1
    --
    I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
  54. Proof by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

    How a system works can't be told from the inside of the same system.

    Oh, and how is that? I'd imagine it would be something along these lines: http://www.nyx.net/~gthompso/quine.htm

    Now it is true that you can never prove axioms (nor prove a negative), and thus never prove a model to be true from within the same system. But I see no reason why the true rules of the system could not be accurately described. They just can't be proven.

    --
    I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
  55. Re:Shortsightedness is a weakness by Savantissimo · · Score: 2

    The four states of matter (as we phrase it today) are solid, liquid, gas and plasma, which map directly to the ancient conceptions of earth, water, air and fire. Just because we changed the meaning of "element" doesn't make the ancients wrong.

    --
    "Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?" - Patrick Henry
  56. Supersymmetry Denier by PureRain · · Score: 0

    Quick, there's doubt by some in the science community about Supersymmetry! Let's get a whole bunch of us together and write articles and blogs about how the whole idea of Supersymmetry is crap! Maybe we can come up with some reasons of our own too!

    Hmm, why won't the mums, dads and business people join me this time??

    There's doubt!!!

  57. Re:Shortsightedness is a weakness by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

    Yes. Their monopoly on a large body of knowledge was part of the Church's power. They didn't want peasants reading the bible and disputing their interpretation, nor did they want people educated enough to question their doctrine. Several popes and cardinals wrote long essays arguing against mass literacy.

    --
    I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  58. Re:Shortsightedness is a weakness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lord Kelvin, estimated the age of the earth at 100 million of years due to heat decay over time. He got a wrong result because he couldn't take into account the natural decay of radioelements. However he still got a much bigger age than 6000 years.

  59. Weird Spell Check Fail by hicksw · · Score: 1

    Sorry to call you on this, but the rule is too much fun not to post. So thanks for the excuse:

    For the better understanding of the underlying simplicity of English spelling:

    "I before E
    except after C
    or when sounded like A as in NEIGHBOR and WEIGH
    and in weird words like WEIRD"

    Wikipedia has a discussion of I/E ordering in English, but it lacks this particular mnemonic.
    --
    Sometimes boldness is in fashion, at other times, italicism.

  60. Hugh Everett III by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    See Hugh Everett III http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_Everett_III

    Why should there be a beginning and end to reality? Infinity makes much more sense.

  61. Re:Shortsightedness is a weakness by modmans2ndcoming · · Score: 1

    He estimated it based on deduction so it does not really count.