Mirror neutrons all over the science news

In summary, the paper discusses a 5 sigma event where neutrons appear to decay faster in the presence of a magnetic field, leading to the theory of parallel universes and mirror particles. However, some experts are skeptical of the experiment and believe there may be alternative explanations for the results. The paper also raises questions about how and when this phenomenon will be tested and the validity of multiverse math. Some argue that the theory is getting overly complicated and that scientists should focus on simply describing the phenomenon rather than creating wild hypotheses. Overall, there is still much debate and more testing needed to confirm or deny the existence of a mirror magnetic field around the Earth and the potential link to parallel universes.
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  • #2
Interesting, but I would cast my vote on some sort of decay mechanism or something before I put it on mirror particles.
 
  • #3
I am not very experienced in physics but have a few questions.

How and when will they test for this?

Is this likely to be true and what is the percentage of a 5 sigma event?

Are there multiple universes or only an additonal universe plus are own? If there is only one additional universe what would it be like?
 
  • #4
billa12 said:
I am not very experienced in physics but have a few questions.

How and when will they test for this?

Is this likely to be true and what is the percentage of a 5 sigma event?

Are there multiple universes or only an additonal universe plus are own? If there is only one additional universe what would it be like?

The sigma scale refers to the percentage chance that the result can be reproduced by another physicist. The 'parallel worlds' are their explanation for the phenomenon. The confidence level is in the experiment, not in the theory that attempts to explain it. Sigma 5 is the highest possible score of statistical reliability.
 
  • #5
I am having trouble understanding the experiment. Can someone explain it to me? I am not very knowledgeable in physics.
 
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  • #6
The assumptions used appear to be vulnerable to criticism. The validity of multiverse math does not mean it is physically meaningful.
 
  • #7
I had never heard about the neutron anomalous losses in the presence of magnetic field,maybe someone could expand on it but after reading the paper I think is a bit of a stretch to go from that anomaly to the parallel universe and mirror stuff they propose, and I didn't understand how a parallel universe can explain dark matter, which seems to belong to our universe.
 
  • #8
Mark M said:
Sigma 5 is the highest possible score of statistical reliability.
6 sigma would be better. And 7, 8, ..., too, of course.
There is nothing magical happening at 5. It just marks a region where random fluctuations become really rare, and measurement errors and real effects become more likely in comparison.

I think it is another case for this xkcd comic.
It is easy to calculate some asymmetry (page 3, left side in the publication). But finding all sources of asymmetries in the experiment is the tricky part. If you just measure asymmetries, you can find some nearly everywhere.
 
  • #9
I'm not sure I completely understand what they discovered...is it that neutrons decay faster in magnetic fields?

I swear that modern particle physicists are in a competition to outcrazy each other's explanations. What ever happened to being content with simply describing a phenomenon? Enough with the wild hypothesizing already...

At the rate we're going, this will be seen by some as a viable scientific hypothesis in a few years:

"Perhaps all the gravitons and graviolies that are constantly popping into and out of existence scattered off of one of the many types of neutrino fields that fill our universe and imparted momentum to the neutrons through reversed time asymmetry. This caused the neutrons to be absorbed by a quantum singularity that only exists in one of the 8 additional curled up microscopic dimensions we can't observed. No extra universes needed."
 
  • #10
Reptillian said:
I'm not sure I completely understand what they discovered...is it that neutrons decay faster in magnetic fields?

I swear that modern particle physicists are in a competition to outcrazy each other's explanations. What ever happened to being content with simply describing a phenomenon? Enough with the wild hypothesizing already...

At the rate we're going, this will be seen by some as a viable scientific hypothesis in a few years:

"Perhaps all the gravitons and graviolies that are constantly popping into and out of existence scattered off of one of the many types of neutrino fields that fill our universe and imparted momentum to the neutrons through reversed time asymmetry. This caused the neutrons to be absorbed by a quantum singularity that only exists in one of the 8 additional curled up microscopic dimensions we can't observed. No extra universes needed."

... lol
 
  • #11
Mark M said:
Sigma 5 is the highest possible score of statistical reliability.

There is no highest possible score of statistical reliability.
 
  • #12
"earth maybe possesses a mirror magnetic field on the order of 0.1 Gauss" How long would it take to test for this? If the Earth doesn't possesses a mirror magnet field, does that make the parallel universe theory proven wrong? And just a mathematical artifact?
 
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  • #13
I'm not too impressed by the paper. It looks like a theorist with a pet crazy theory that happens to find some observational result that fits his pet crazy theory. I think it's more likely that there's some alternative explanation for the results.

One thing that makes me suspicious. I'm always extremely skeptical when someone uses data to make a conclusion without people on the original team that collected the data as either a coauthor. The reason I'm skeptical is that having one of the original data collection people involved can have someone tell you when what you've measured is "something silly" (i.e. well of course you'll get those results, because we had a video camera that generated radio frequency static.)
 
  • #14
I am not to impressed either. But how long would it take to confirm or deny the mirror magnet field around the earth?
And how long would it take to retest the quicker decay of the neutron by magnetic field? And if there is no mirror magnetic field does that mean the parallel universe theory is finished?
 
  • #15
I'm still not understanding what they mean by neutron losses in the paper. Are they referring to the neutron decay, or to the escape of neutrons from the ultra-cold trap via quantum tunnelling? Do they mean that neutron decay seems to be magnetic field dependent, or that escape from the trap is field dependent? I guess I'm confused...is it just me, or do they jump right into the math of mirror universes without explaining the physics of the situation adequately? Are they saying that neutrons are disappearing from the trap that can't be accounted for via neutron decay or quantum tunnelling, so they must be escaping to to a parallel universe? Because if so, that's crazy.
 
  • #16
Sorry for annoying everyone but how long would it take to test to confirm the results of the experiment?

And if the results stand up and all other explanation can't be explained does that mean that the mirror particles exist or are there many explanations possible even if scientist can't figure out what is causing the results?
 
  • #17
The mirror explanation is way too exotic. There is surely some other explanation that does not require a pencil standing on its point.
 
  • #18
Sorry for sounding like a broken record. If the experiment turns out to be true and they cannot find any explanation to the experiment does that prove mirror particles?
 
  • #19
billa12 said:
Sorry for sounding like a broken record. If the experiment turns out to be true and they cannot find any explanation to the experiment does that prove mirror particles?

Be careful with "what if" questions. IF there is no other explanation then it would be accepted that mirror neutrons exist and this mirror universe does as well. HOWEVER, this is a very unlikely scenario and one would have to have extremely good evidence that it is indeed what is happening. Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence of course. (Or however the phrase goes) It is simply more likely that some other decay method or something else is happening in the experiment.
 
  • #20
billa12 said:
Sorry for sounding like a broken record. If the experiment turns out to be true and they cannot find any explanation to the experiment does that prove mirror particles?


Nope, in order to be scientifically proven, the mirror universe hypothesis would not only have to explain the observation, but would also have to make unique testable predictions...the more the better. It's not good science to observe a phenomenon, realize that current theory hasn't yet been used to describe the phenomenon, come up with an alternative hypothesis, and say "Well, since nobody has yet described this phenomenon and tried to include it within the existing framework, my alternate hypothesis must be true...let's consider it confirmed and call it a day"

Instead the first step should be to try to encompass the observations using what we already know about how the universe works. If that fails, we grudgingly hypothesize, predict, and test with experiment. When hypothesizing, I prefer to follow the K.I.S.S. rule (Keep It Simple Stupid) ;) I can't think of anything more complicated then postulating the existence of a whole nother universe just to explain one observation.
 
  • #21
billa12 said:
Sorry for sounding like a broken record. If the experiment turns out to be true and they cannot find any explanation to the experiment does that prove mirror particles?

The explanation of "mirror particles" is sufficiently weird so that I wouldn't be satisified unless they do another experiment that involves completely different physics done by a different research group that ends up with the results expected from mirror particles.

The problem with experiments is that they are very noisy and complicated so even if you can't think of an alternative explanations, that doesn't mean that there isn't one.

One thing that would be an "easy" first step would be to have some other group do the same experiment. That way, we can get rid of "opps" explanations.
 

1. What are mirror neutrons?

Mirror neutrons are hypothetical particles that are predicted to exist in a parallel universe to our own. They are thought to have the same mass and spin as regular neutrons, but with opposite electromagnetic properties.

2. How are mirror neutrons related to mirrors?

The concept of mirror neutrons is based on the idea of mirror symmetry, which suggests that there is a "mirror" universe that is a reflection of our own. In this parallel universe, particles and their properties are mirrored, hence the name "mirror neutrons".

3. Why are mirror neutrons important in science?

Mirror neutrons are important because they could provide insight into the fundamental laws of physics and potentially explain some of the mysteries of our universe, such as dark matter. Studying mirror neutrons could also help us understand the concept of mirror symmetry and its role in the universe.

4. How are scientists studying mirror neutrons?

Scientists are currently searching for evidence of mirror neutrons by conducting experiments with high-energy particle accelerators. They are also studying the effects of mirror neutrons on the behavior of regular neutrons and other particles.

5. Have mirror neutrons been observed or discovered?

No, mirror neutrons have not yet been observed or discovered. They are still a theoretical concept and their existence has not been confirmed. However, scientists continue to search for evidence of their existence through experiments and observations.

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