String theory officially useful, may not represent reality

Tue, Feb 17th, 2009

Brookhaven National Laboratory has what is currently one of the highest energy particle accelerators on the planet. The Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) hosts collisions between the nuclei of gold atoms that are moving at roughly 99 percent of the speed of light, creating a quark soup similar to the one that existed immediately after the big bang. But the scientists running the experiments started noticing something funny about the data: instead of expanding evenly outward, the collision debris were ellipsoidal (think a 3-D ellipse). What was even stranger was that this sort of behavior had already been described, for a gas of lithium atoms at the opposite end of the temperature spectrum, at a fraction of a microkelvin. As these groups were talking about a collaboration, things got stranger still when string theorists started citing this work, since the behavior had already been predicted through their work-a fact that the physicists weren't aware of until a science reporter called to ask what they thought about it.

Our system thought this story was mainly about: Highest Energy, Lithium Atoms
Have different ideas? Please tell us.
Share with friends if you like this page:
No comments yet.