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WORLD SCIENCE
WORLD SCIENCE "Long Before It's In the Papers" RETURN TO THE WORLD SCIENCE HOME PAGE New subatomic particle may cause universe's expansionPosted
July
27 Two
of
the
biggest
physics
breakthroughs
during
the
last
decade
are
the
discovery
that
wispy
subatomic
particles
called
neutrinos
actually
have
a
small
amount
of
mass
and
the
detection
that
the
expansion
of
the
universe
is
actually
picking
up
speed. Neutrinos
are
created
by
the
trillions
in
the
nuclear
furnaces
of
stars
such
as
our
sun.
They
stream
through
the
universe,
and
billions
pass
through
all
matter,
including
people,
every
second.
Besides
a
minuscule
mass,
they
have
no
electrical
charge,
which
means
they
interact
very
little,
if
at
all,
with
the
materials
they
pass
through. The
new
theory
is
advanced
in
a
paper
by
Nelson;
David
Kaplan,
also
a
UW
physics
professor;
and
Neal
Weiner,
a
UW
research
associate
in
physics.
Their
work,
supported
in
part
by
a
grant
from
the
U.S.
Department
of
Energy,
is
detailed
in
a
paper
accepted
for
publication
in
an
upcoming
issue
of
the
research
journal
Physical
Review
Letters. "In
our
theory,
eventually
the
neutrinos
would
get
too
far
apart
and
become
too
massive
to
be
influenced
by
the
effect
of
dark
energy
any
more,
so
the
acceleration
of
the
expansion
would
have
to
stop,"
she
said.
"The
universe
could
continue
to
expand,
but
at
an
ever-decreasing
rate."
ultimately
it
could
help
scientists
discern
whether
expansion
of
the
universe
will
go
on
indefinitely.
In
this
new
theory,
neutrinos
are
influenced
by
a
new
force
resulting
from
their
interactions
with
accelerons.
Dark
energy
results
as
the
universe
tries
to
pull
neutrinos
apart,
yielding
a
tension
like
that
in
stretched
rubber
band,
said
Ann
Nelson,
a
UW
physics
professor.
That
tension
fuels
the
expansion
of
the
universe,
she
said.
Neutrinos
are
created
by
the
trillions
in
the
nuclear
furnaces
of
stars
such
as
our
sun.
They
stream
through
the
universe,
and
billions
pass
through
all
matter,
including
people,
every
second.
Besides
a
minuscule
mass,
they
have
no
electrical
charge,
which
means
they
interact
very
little,
if
at
all,
with
the
materials
they
pass
through.
But
the
interaction
between
accelerons
and
other
matter
is
even
weaker,
Nelson
said,
which
is
why
those
particles
have
not
yet
been
seen
by
sophisticated
detectors.
However,
in
the
new
theory,
accelerons
exhibit
a
force
that
can
influence
neutrinos,
a
force
she
believes
can
be
detected
by
a
variety
of
neutrino
experiments
already
operating
around
the
world.
"There
are
many
models
of
dark
energy,
but
the
tests
are
mostly
limited
to
cosmology,
in
particular
measuring
the
rate
of
expansion
of
the
universe.
Because
this
involves
observing
very
distant
objects,
it
is
very
difficult
to
make
such
a
measurement
precisely,"
Nelson
said.
"This
is
the
only
model
that
gives
us
some
meaningful
way
to
do
experiments
on
earth
to
find
the
force
that
gives
rise
to
dark
energy.
We
can
do
this
using
existing
neutrino
experiments."
The
new
theory
is
advanced
in
a
paper
by
Nelson;
David
Kaplan,
also
a
UW
physics
professor;
and
Neal
Weiner,
a
UW
research
associate
in
physics.
Their
work,
supported
in
part
by
a
grant
from
the
U.S.
Department
of
Energy,
is
detailed
in
a
paper
accepted
for
publication
in
an
upcoming
issue
of
Physical
Review
Letters,
a
journal
of
the
American
Physical
Society.
The
researchers
say
a
neutrino's
mass
can
actually
change
according
to
the
environment
through
which
it
is
passing,
in
the
same
way
the
appearance
of
light
changes
depending
on
whether
it's
traveling
through
air,
water
or
a
prism.
That
means
that
neutrino
detectors
can
come
up
with
somewhat
different
findings
depending
on
where
they
are
and
what
surrounds
them.
But
if
neutrinos
are
a
component
of
dark
energy,
that
suggests
the
existence
of
a
force
that
would
reconcile
anomalies
among
the
various
experiments,
Nelson
said.
The
existence
of
that
force,
made
up
of
both
neutrinos
and
accelerons,
will
continue
to
fuel
the
expansion
of
the
universe,
she
said.
Physicists
have
pursued
evidence
that
could
tell
whether
the
universe
will
continue
to
expand
indefinitely
or
come
to
an
abrupt
halt
and
collapse
on
itself
in
a
so-called
"big
crunch."
While
the
new
theory
doesn't
prescribe
a
"big
crunch,"
Nelson
said,
it
does
mean
that
at
some
point
the
expansion
will
stop
getting
faster.
"In our theory, eventually the neutrinos would get too far apart and become too massive to be influenced by the effect of dark energy any more, so the acceleration of the expansion would have to stop," she said. "The universe could continue to expand, but at an ever-decreasing rate."
WORLD SCIENCE "Long
Before It's In the Papers"
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