South Pole Telescope Data Places Better Limit on Neutrino Mass 25
An anonymous reader writes an excerpt from a press release by the University of Chicago: "Analysis of data from the 10-meter South Pole Telescope is providing new support for the most widely accepted explanation of dark energy — the source of the mysterious force that is responsible for the accelerating expansion of the universe."
The research resulted in three papers involving new constraints on the mass of neutrinos, a measurement of the angular power spectrum of the CMB, and a catalog of newly discovered galaxy clusters. The data lends a bit more support to the cosmological constant theory of dark energy.
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
It's been developing for quite some time, apparently.
There's brazillions of them (Score:4, Funny)
WTF is a "neutronio"?
Re:There's brazillions of them (Score:4, Funny)
I find spelling unpossile diffikult sometimes.
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All of my spelling and grammar are perfect in every way, just things are spelled differently in this dimension. We thought we had the rift closed before those creatures got through, but in fact we just popped out here, and let me tell you that was a surprise. Identical in every detail except spelling and grammar. God only knows whats going on back home, probably everyone is being eaten forever in the simulation spaces of the interlopers' minds, bit of a red face situation alright. Still, we'll get the exper
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It's a press release from the University of Chicago. You should feel lucky it's not measured in rods or links.
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WTF is a "neutronio"?
It goes in and out of the planet.
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Neutronio (Score:5, Funny)
It's-a me, Neutronio!
"neutronio"? (Score:3)
Is that a new Italian particle?
Jeez, Slashdot... please budget for editors who can proofread, okay?
Re:faggots bitching about the summary. (Score:4, Funny)
lower limit on neutrino mass? (Score:5, Interesting)
The experiment reports a new upper limit on the neutrino mass. I've seen upper limit estimates before this one, but I don't ever recall seeing a lower limit reported on a direct measurement of the neutrino mass. Nonzero mass is a requirement in standard theories of neutrino oscillation but that's a consequence of the theory, not a direct measurement. Is there a direct measurement of a lower limit out there that I'm not aware of?
Re:lower limit on neutrino mass? (Score:5, Informative)
South Pole. It figures (Score:4, Funny)
There's nothing better to do there.
If the telescope was in Hawaii, they'd just put down any old number and hit the beach early. "Surf's up, dude!"