800,000 Tons of Rock Excavated for Massive Underground Neutrino Detector (energy.gov) 112
800,000 tons of rock have been excavated from a South Dakota research facility — part of a multi-year process "to help answer some of physics' biggest questions," writes America's Energy Department.
"The caverns they excavated will hold a massive particle detector and accompanying equipment." Along with partners from more than 35 countries, the Department of Energy's Office of Science is supporting the Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment at the Long-Baseline Neutrino Facility (LBNF-DUNE)... To study how neutrinos change type as they travel, LBNF-DUNE will be sending a stream of neutrinos from DOE's Fermilab National Accelerator Laboratory in Illinois [nearly 600 miles away] to South Dakota. At the beginning and end of the particles' journey, detectors will measure the types of neutrinos and antineutrinos. By comparing the rates of how both particles change type, scientists may find a difference that accounts for that ancient misalignment.
There's also hope they'll detect neutrinos from supernovae explosions — and maybe even decaying protons LBNF-DUNE will use massive, seven-story tall detectors. Each detector will have 17,000 tons of liquid argon. That vast quantity of liquid maximizes the likelihood that scientists will detect as many neutrinos as possible. The far detector — the one in South Dakota — will be located about a mile underground. That distance places it in the right location compared to Fermilab and blocks the detector from other cosmic particles.
"Just carrying out the excavation took three years," the announcement notes. ("The team had to dissemble the equipment, move it deep underground, and then reassemble it.) The 800,000 tons of rock were moved to the surface and then stored in a former mine.
"Now that the excavation is complete, the LBNF-DUNE team is moving on to the next steps. Currently, they are installing the far detector in the Sanford Underground Research Facility. They anticipate finishing construction and starting to operate the detector in 2028. The team will then move on to installing the near detector at Fermilab.
"The launch of LBNF/DUNE will be the beginning of a new era in understanding neutrinos and knowing more about our universe as a whole."
"The caverns they excavated will hold a massive particle detector and accompanying equipment." Along with partners from more than 35 countries, the Department of Energy's Office of Science is supporting the Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment at the Long-Baseline Neutrino Facility (LBNF-DUNE)... To study how neutrinos change type as they travel, LBNF-DUNE will be sending a stream of neutrinos from DOE's Fermilab National Accelerator Laboratory in Illinois [nearly 600 miles away] to South Dakota. At the beginning and end of the particles' journey, detectors will measure the types of neutrinos and antineutrinos. By comparing the rates of how both particles change type, scientists may find a difference that accounts for that ancient misalignment.
There's also hope they'll detect neutrinos from supernovae explosions — and maybe even decaying protons LBNF-DUNE will use massive, seven-story tall detectors. Each detector will have 17,000 tons of liquid argon. That vast quantity of liquid maximizes the likelihood that scientists will detect as many neutrinos as possible. The far detector — the one in South Dakota — will be located about a mile underground. That distance places it in the right location compared to Fermilab and blocks the detector from other cosmic particles.
"Just carrying out the excavation took three years," the announcement notes. ("The team had to dissemble the equipment, move it deep underground, and then reassemble it.) The 800,000 tons of rock were moved to the surface and then stored in a former mine.
"Now that the excavation is complete, the LBNF-DUNE team is moving on to the next steps. Currently, they are installing the far detector in the Sanford Underground Research Facility. They anticipate finishing construction and starting to operate the detector in 2028. The team will then move on to installing the near detector at Fermilab.
"The launch of LBNF/DUNE will be the beginning of a new era in understanding neutrinos and knowing more about our universe as a whole."
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It's a secret. You'll have to read the article to find out.
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Environmental impact study (Score:2)
For what it is worth, here is the federal government's environmental impact study by the Dept of Energy.
https://www.energy.gov/sites/d... [energy.gov]
What's curious is that the other part of the federal government, the Environment Protection Agency, did not find anything of note or serious in what it's brother branch in the federal government, Department of Energy, is doing.
Still want to know how many of those involved scientists, government bureaucrats and lobbyists lobby for stricter pollution laws and other environme
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About 320,000m.
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320,000 cubic meters. Stupid interface ate the exponent.
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Now I have to take the cubic root to get an idea how big that is!
Damn ... will take a while to do that on paper.
Seems to be a "cube" of roughly 70m length.
For you American unliberated simpletons: for all practical purpose a meter is nearly the same as a yard. Just do not build a house half with meters and half with yards ...
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No you don't, it's 1 meter X 1 meter X 320,000 meters or 320 km
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What that supposed to mean?
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You take a square meter surface, imagine a sheet of paper 1 meter X 1 meter. Do you visualize it now? Now, imagine that behind that surface there is a 320 km long space of the same size. No cubic root calculation necessary, now say you have 100 such sheet of 1 meter X 1 meter paper, so a 10 meters X 10 meters surface, the volume behind it would be 3.2 km. Again, no need to do any calculations to visualize how big it is.
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Just do not build a house half with meters and half with yards ...
So where is my dog supposed to poop if we got no yards? Further to that where am I supposed to poop if all we have is yards?
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My cats "learned" to poo poo on a toilet.
No idea about your yards, did I spell it wrong?
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Now I have to take the cubic root to get an idea how big that is!
Damn ... will take a while to do that on paper.
Seems to be a "cube" of roughly 70m length.
For you American unliberated simpletons: for all practical purpose a meter is nearly the same as a yard. Just do not build a house half with meters and half with yards ...
And the meter is defined by a fraction. Specifically:
The length of the path travelled by light in vacuum during a time interval of 1/299,792,458 of a second.
Although there is a tiny issue with gravity at the measurement site.
But seriously, what is the deal with people who fly into a rage when they hear anything other than metric? It almost sounds like rather than us simpletons, they aren't capable of knowing more than one thing.
My shop in the garage is metric. I mostly work in metric. But I reg
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Originally the meter was defined to be one million meters from the equator to the north pole.
The silly rage some people have is about as ridiculous as getting all pissed about a 9 mm bolt versus a 10 mm bolt.
That is actually a thing that matters.
There was an incident in an British Airways flight, where the window flew away and the pilot nearly got sucked out of the window.
The maintenance engineer who replaced the screws, admitted - and surprisingly remembered - a mistake: instead of looking up the speccs f
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Originally the meter was defined to be one million meters from the equator to the north pole.
Sure Of course, that wasn't at all accurate. So over time they used a number of different measurements, like a platinum bar. But it turns out that the bar didn't stay the same size. Prett yweird, but we must remember trhat the Metric only crowd likes to act as if they are some sort of standard. It turns out that saying 1 million meters form equator to north pole is completely stupid. The earth is an oblate spheroid, and the distance is not equal - therefore not accurate.
The silly rage some people have is about as ridiculous as getting all pissed about a 9 mm bolt versus a 10 mm bolt. That is actually a thing that matters. There was an incident in an British Airways flight, where the window flew away and the pilot nearly got sucked out of the window. The maintenance engineer who replaced the screws, admitted - and surprisingly remembered - a mistake: instead of looking up the speccs for the screws, or using an instrument, he just used his eye measures. So he put in replacements that had an unnoticeable different winding and were unnoticeable a little bit to thin.
Just random freak knowledge, no one cares about.
That has not a thing to do with this
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At that time, the real size of the planet was not known.
So because they thought they are "super scientists", they chose the distance from equator to the pole. Just to figure later that the equator is roughly 300km wider than the circle over the pole, hm, probably more?
As long as you have tools that work perfectly with your system. The system does not really matter.
But it is the imperial folks, especially Americans, that mock the metric system.
A meter is a bit more than a big step. Most humans are just below
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There's a lot more context to that.
The French Academy of Sciences had not-long-before completed a project to compare the lengths on the ground of a degree of longitude in the north (Finland) and near the equator (The infamous La Condamine expedition [wikipedia.org], which was intended to test the deduction from N
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Time is naturally measured using a distance metric.
How long will it take to make those eggs? It will take about 5400000000000 light centimeters.
Before you know it, you've re-invented the ad hoc CGS system that came before SI, but removed the S. Everything can be expressed in other units, perhaps just 2 of them: Centimeters, and Grams.
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So we've had it backwards all along. Before you know it, you've re-invented the ad hoc CGS system that came before SI, but removed the S. Everything can be expressed in other units, perhaps just 2 of them: Centimeters, and Grams.
I miss my Grams.
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A gram was defined as the mass of 1 cubic cm of pure water at 4C (might be wrong about the temperature). So really you just need a metre and some pure water to start with.
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320,000 cubic meters. Stupid interface ate the exponent.
works fine for me just like in the bc calculator: 320,000m^3
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Re:How much is 800,000 tons? (Score:4, Funny)
How much is 800,000 tons?
About 1.76 GLb or 1.64GiLbs
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How much is 800,000 tons? I know they wouldn't have listed the amount in the title unless it was very little or a lot, but which?
That's more than the weight of five adult African elephants.
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very little
Its standard civil engineering work. The requirements were a lot which took three years to reprocess the overburden from the rock cut into an existing underground mineshaft.
I oversaw CA smallest state inspected dam in Carlsbad, a 1,000,000 cu ft remove and replace with engineered fill which took 2yrs. Its now a dog park but the dam precipitates out toxins from downstream fish hatchery.
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800,000 tons * 2,000 lbm/ton = 1,600,000,000 lbm of rock.
1 ft^3 of rock weights about 200lbm so:
1,600,000,000 / 200 = 8,000,000 ft^3 of rock removed.
But, many nerds don't know how much a ft^3 is so here's something you can understand:
"The displacement of the Japanese battleship Yamato, which was approximately 72,000 long tons (73,000 t) at full load."
72,000 Ltons * 1.12LTon/Ton = 80,640tons
=>
1 Yamato = 80,640T
Rock removed = 800,000T
=>
800,000 / 80,640 = 9.920 Yamatos
The Space Ship Yamato was made from
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How much is 800,000 tons? I know they wouldn't have listed the amount in the title unless it was very little or a lot, but which?
A whole lot of railroad track ballast....
Excavated? (Score:2)
I glanced over TFA and I couldn't confirm this but; any reasons they didn't use dynamite?
Tunnels through rock usually use that method. It's been used for railway tunnels etc. for ages.
Even in a city where I lived, they used dynamite to clear the rock under a street to install new water and sewer bigger pipes deeper than the old ones although in another city with the same use case, I have been told dynamiting was forbidden by that city in their case so it took them ages compared to the other city.
Anyway, may
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I glanced over TFA and I couldn't confirm this but; any reasons they didn't use dynamite?
Tunnels through rock usually use that method. It's been used for railway tunnels etc. for ages.
Even in a city where I lived, they used dynamite to clear the rock under a street to install new water and sewer bigger pipes deeper than the old ones although in another city with the same use case, I have been told dynamiting was forbidden by that city in their case so it took them ages compared to the other city.
Anyway, maybe it would have taken less time than 3 years using dynamite if indeed they didn't use any and I assume they are far from any city.
Or, maybe they did use dynamite but don't mention to sound somehow more politically correct. My inquiring mind is curious...
There is a link in TFA to an article about the construction https://news.fnal.gov/2021/05/... [fnal.gov] It doesn't mention dynamite as such but "blasting".
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Blasting can be done for a small area and with little setup.
https://bestsupportunderground... [bestsuppor...ground.com]
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For doing tunnels that are long and uniform, blasting comes out as more expensive and takes longer to do. Blasting can be done for a small area and with little setup. https://bestsupportunderground... [bestsuppor...ground.com]
I concur. The old abandoned Rail tunnels in our are were done Dig and Blast. They definitely aren't uniform. Especially when they had to clear out the fractured rock that wasn't obvious immediately after blasting.
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Thanks, I have worked on tight holes as well but luckily we only got stuck for a couple days at most and managed to pull out, sometimes with the help of Schlumberger.
But indeed the project in TFA was a different kind of drilling.
Thanks RockDoctor!
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I remember the pre-drilling meeting. Quoth I : "That's an (ehemm) ambitious plan. The mud company must have some really special jungle juice. And your pore pressure plan has neglected the common overpressure in the **** Formation between 1800 and 2200m TVD. Particularly
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I've forgotten the name of that damned O/P formation - and I spent 15 years fighting it's pore pressure while positioning wells for the geosteered section. Tight as a gnat's chuff, so no real blowout hazard. But you've got 2 days after drilling before it starts throwing little rocks at you .... where's my favourite caving ... ; on the third day it'll be throwing big rocks [blogspot.com] at you, and by the 5th day you might as well sidetrack because you're not going to get your casing down there.
That's what I was thinking like; drill for 24 hours then spend the next 24 hours at least putting in a lenght of casing. Maybe by starting with a 20 foot wide casing and using say 128 types of casing each smaller than the previous, this might work! Just kidding...
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Hey! You've been far longer than I have at this so here a question for my curious inquiring mind. What is the maximum number of different size of casing you've seen used and heard of being used on a single hole? I think the most I have seen is 4...
Not sure how a bigger drill bit would fit through the bore head (forgot the name, the thing you close when there is a blow out) while drilling in order to start with bigger casings.
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- Conductor pipe : 48 or 36 in casing, either washed in on jets (offshore, if you're setting it into mud), or
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Thanks for the detailed explanation! I haven't set foot on a rig since 1984 so I forgot we just put in the blowout prevention stuff after the surface casing is set but it sure makes a lot of sense! I think I recall it now since you mention it! I only worked on land based rigs.
- Conductor pipe : 48 or 36 in casing, either washed in on jets (offshore, if you're setting it into mud), or augered in while building the cellar and derrick substructure while the rig is still on the previous site.
Yeah, I was still "on the previous site" so I have never seen it being installed and I was more or less unaware of it although I am pretty sure I have obviously seen it when we got there now that you mention it! I even think I visualiz
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I've seen both - multiple rings of concrete (pre-cast ; standard civil engineering stuff, typically used to construct a valve chamber) set on competent bedrock with a cement floor, so the "sump pump" can return mud and cuttings to the mud cleaning system ; and 36in casing lowered and cemented into a 50ft deep augered hole, then a cellar constructed on that. Depends on the ground condition
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The main purpose is to conduct mud returns back to the pits, and the only pressure control is a diverter bag dropped around the drillstring after the BHA has descended below the table.
Oops! The thing driving the mud to the shakers was obviously higher than ground level so I might still be confused about the "conductor pipe". I can't figure it out now but then, the "conductor pipe" would have to go through the blowout prevention stuff as well, right? I seem to recall the mud return was above the blowout prevention stuff, just below the table. Or, do they cut it once the surface casing is set before installing the blowout prevention stuff?
There for sure wasn't any pipes going around the bl
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The conductor pipe - on a land job - is normally set at a level in the "cellar" which is below the ground level, and a series of "sump pumps" is lowered into the cellar sump to pump the drilling fluid back into the shale shakers and thence back to the circulating systems. They also have to clear out the cuttings that accumulate in the sump - with a "back hoe" (en_US) or JCB (en_GB),
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How is a stream of neutrinos generated? (Score:1)
I asked Gemini and I post excerpts form its replies. I'm confident enough to reject one but I don't know about the other
- How can one send a stream of neutrinos?
-- "By colliding high-energy particles (like protons or electrons) in a particle accelerator, neutrinos can be produced as a byproduct. These neutrinos can then be directed using magnetic fields, but controlling t
Re:How is a stream of neutrinos generated? (Score:5, Informative)
You cannot steer a beam of neutrinos using magnetic fields - they are neutral particles. What you can do is generate and steer a beam of more easily-controlled particles - particles that readily decay into neutrinos.
This page from Fermilab [fnal.gov] describes the process. They start with a high-energy proton beam going in roughly the right direction. The proton beam hits a graphite target, creating a spray of collision products. You can tune the beam energy to favor certain collision products over others. In particular, they want to maximize the production of positive pions. These particles decay rapidly, but they do stick around long enough that you can (with magnetic fields) separate them from the other chaff, select for pions that have a certain momentum, and focus the beam in the direction you want. Not long after, the pions decay into anti-muons and neutrinos - still mostly going in the same direction the pion beam was going. (They can also change the pion filter to select for negative pions to produce antineutrinos.) The muons get absorbed by a thick wall of steel and concrete, but the neutrinos just sail on their way.
The resulting neutrino beam is not perfectly focused - think spotlight rather than laser - but has enough flux going in the right direction for the experiment to work.
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It gives you neutrinos with a particular energy. Neutrino oscillation is a function of the distance / energy. It's handy to be able to modify the energy because modifying the distance is usually difficult.
Re: How is a stream of neutrinos generated? (Score:3)
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Does the following response which I got from ChatGPT address all of your concerns, my complaining chap?
---
Sending a stream of neutrinos is a complex process that requires sophisticated technology, usually involving **particle accelerators** and **nuclear reactions**. Here's how itâ(TM)s typically done:
### 1. **Creating Neutrinos:**
Neutrinos are produced in certain types of nuclear reactions or particle decays. Common methods to generate a stream of neutrinos include:
- **Nuclear Reactions in Reactors**:
Paging Greta! (Score:1)
To study how neutrinos change type as they travel (Score:2)
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Re:To study how neutrinos change type as they trav (Score:5, Informative)
Neutrino oscillation is itself a weird phenomenon. It was predicted as a theoretical possibility decades ago, but like all things related to neutrinos really, really hard to detect. We don't have a good explanation for why it should be possible (other than: it's not forbidden by our models). This experiment should help pin down the what and how of that mechanism.
The second main thrust is that this experiment can produce neutrinos and antineutrinos (not at the same time, but they can switch back and forth). That hasn't been possible before (we've mostly been detecting neutrinos from the sun or cosmic rays, and we have to take what we can get). Our present understanding of physics predicts that matter and antimatter should have existed in exactly equal amounts during the Big Bang. It obviously didn't, because we and the whole cosmos exist, with no antimatter to be found. It is possible that better understanding neutrinos is the key to explaining that mystery.
A third goal is to train and employ a new generation of particle physicists, highly-skilled technicians, computer scientists, and other really intelligent people. That by itself probably doesn't mean much, except 1) it avoids a brain drain to other countries, while 2) attracting such talent to the US, and 3) such people don't necessarily stay at accelerator labs forever: they go out into the world and use their impressive skills for other things that we all benefit from.
Accelerator-based Neutrinos Well Established (Score:2)
The second main thrust is that this experiment can produce neutrinos and antineutrinos (not at the same time, but they can switch back and forth). That hasn't been possible before (we've mostly been detecting neutrinos from the sun or cosmic rays, and we have to take what we can get).
That's not correct: not counting the short baseline neutrino beams that discovered the muon and tau neutrinos, this long baseline design has been done before. T2K ("Tokai to Kamioka") in Japan and CERN-Gran Sasso are both examples of this long baseline neutrino beams and even Fermilab has sent beams to the Soudan mine in Minnesota before. DUNE is improving on these with a greater beam power (so more neutrinos) and a longer baseline of over 1,000km vs. several hundred for T2K. These improvements should give
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"use their impressive skills for other things that we all benefit from."
Surveillance and bomb tech?
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And what do they hope accomplish ?
To answer known questions in science? There is no grand conspiracy here.
What's the goal ?
To answer known questions in science.
Teleport ?? Time travel ? Warp drive ? Create warp hole ? Better microwave oven ? Death ray ?? Figure out how aliens travel in their space crafts ???
Understanding a fundamental particle of physics may yield results that no knows yet.
Why are we spending money on this? (Score:1)
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We already know they exist. To study how neutrinos change type as they travel,
The purpose of this detector is not merely to detect neutrinos exist. The purpose is to determine how neutrinos oscillate. It is like the 2nd sentence of the quoted article: "To study how neutrinos change type as they travel, . . ."
All I see is vague statements about the future and our understanding and blah blah blah.
We do not know how neutrinos oscillate. Neutrinos are an elementary particle for which there is little known. This will expand knowledge on them.
This is not a cheap project.
And?
What are we going to learn from it other than "yep, they still exist and we can still detect them sometimes."
How about how they oscillate? How about using that oscillation to detect other phenomenon? We do not know the ramifications of su
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What if they go faster than light again?
The time needed to detect particles... (Score:3)
Years ago two experiments were performed to detect an exotic particle. One detector was at about 4,000 meters depth in the Hawaii offshore, the other deep under a mountain. The Hawaii experiment needed three times the time that people in the cave needed to have the detector up and working, and find the particle they were looking for.
They put it where? (Score:1)
Wait - 3 years, to dig out 800,000 tons of rock, drag it up, and then store it down a mine...?
I would have just used the mine. :)
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Existing mines (Score:2)
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So they dug out rock and dumped it in an old mine. Any normal sane person would simply have used the old mine for the detector.
Maybe there were bats living in the old mine? Everyone loves bats!
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Hmmm, that's a worryingly small amount of progress.
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WTF is Paying for this Hole? (Score:2)
Texas' contribution to taxpayer fundwasting: the superconducting supercollider (1/8 of it): https://www.dallasnews.com/new... [dallasnews.com]
Re:another physicist employment program. (Score:4, Funny)
I know it's futile I respond to this. I'd just like to point out the precious hypocrisy of claiming that something is both unfalsifiable and wrong. Unless all things that are unfalsifiable in your weltanschauung are automatically 'wrong', you've presented a cute contradiction of your own claims.
Re:another physicist employment program. (Score:5, Informative)
Errr...and from where do you think experiments come? They must grow on trees in your world. Your problem appears to be that you have no understanding of mathematics. All math does not necessarily intersect with the real world, you could say it is unverifiable. And verifiable for a physical theory means only verifiable up to an epsilon of error. Math is perfect, our measuring apparatus is not. What is important in mathematics is that it be consistent. Is Hilbert's geometry verifiable? No. It is however internally consistent.
Physics theories, at least relatively new ones, start out as math. They are unverifiable until some bright spark comes along and figures out how to verify them. And the experiment for verification might be inconclusive. Maybe more better technology is needed, maybe a different theory contradicting the first blows it out of the water because the different theory is more descriptive.
Regardless, you cannot never observe "Das Ding an sich". The reason is that in order to get down on all fours with that thing you wish to observe means that you will disturb it and you are only reading the results of your testing equipment. And if you get small enough, you require so much energy and mass in your detector that the detector will collapse into a black hole. So we do the best we can. Maybe you could ask God for a bit of guidance here. I'm sure he'll listen to you.
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Is Hilbert's geometry verifiable? No. It is however internally consistent.
Well, we hope so. Pretty much any nontrivial maths is impossible to prove consistency for.
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Anything unfalsifiable is pseudo-science.
Irrespective of any particular physics theories, the very existence of a physical reality outside of your own mind is unfalsifiable.
So maybe you should just let it go and shut up.
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Hi ChatGPT. Write a few trolling sentences about physics. Use incorrect spelling and grammar. Thank you.
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How long did it take for experimental evidence of parallax motion of the stars to disprove geocentric universe theories? Was it a mistake during those millennia not to consider carefully Aristarchus of Samos's 3rd Century Bc heliocentric theory of the solar system, just because the then-current measuring techniques showed that either the earth did not move or the stars were ridiculously far away? What do you consider ridiculous today that will become supported by tomorrow's evidence?
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the sooner we throw out this trash the better.
The only thing worthwhile in that post was its self-summary.
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There are only two options: /. web site ...
Either your powerful mind made this post appear out of nowhere in the
Or: you used a device like a computer or a phone: that is completely running on quantum effects. Even the display is based on quantum effects.
By the way: word like "unfalsifiable" do not exist. How many nots can you put into a single world? You probably wanted to say something like nonantiunfalsifiable?
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By the way: word like "unfalsifiable" do not exist. How many nots can you put into a single world? You probably wanted to say something like nonantiunfalsifiable?
It's been a term of art in the philosophy of science since at least 1934, and lest you object that it should be phrased as "non falsifiable", fine. It's a good term, specific and useful, and there's really not a good alternative. Perhaps you can propose one.
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The terms are:
Provable
supportable
Evidence based
No one outside US days falsifiable - that is a word with no meaning. Or if you want to give it one: false make able. Why would anyone use a word like this?
Instead of saying: that can not be proved or experimental examined?
An then on top of falsifiable: which already means disprove, you want invent a word that means: un-disproveable?
Falsifiable never showed up in my Highschool nor University.
And certainly not unfalsifiable.
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Don't forget that if you throw out Quantum physics, you lose semiconductors, tablets, smart phones, and computers, CD ROMs amongst other useful items.
At least people wouldn't be able to post drivel (or anything else).
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How about atom bombs?
Modern World literally built on QM and Relativity (Score:3)
Relativity and Quantum physics are (a) unfalsifiable, (b) wrong, (c) incompatible with eachother, and (d) laughable.
How do you think the computer you are literally using to make these ignorant posts works? Classical physics gave us the valve, understanding the quantum nature of the atom and, from that, semiconductors gave us the silicon transistor and now integrated circuits that themselves are getting so small that quantum mechanics is becoming even more important.
Ever used GPS because if you have then the timing accuracy needed to location your position requires corrections from General Relativity to keep the satel
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... while we waste money on vanity science.
Please tell me what you mean by "vanity" science. This is not the Elon Musk Neutrino experiment.
How about we take care of our real responsibilities first?
And what responsibilities should we take of first?
Before we fund upper class kids science projects with tax dollars that could be much better spent?
What are you talking about when you say "upper class kids"? This is a Department of Energy project that will have international participants. Also I am pretty sure one or two stealth bombers would pay for this for project.
This is classism and this is corruption, this is not science.
Again what are you talking about? A major science experiment got federal funding. That's it.
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vanity / junk science is science done so upper class people can pretend to be scientists, give themselves impressive titles and use thisall as an excuse to act high and mighty with lofty public salaries, it's all just classism and corruption, science has been gentrified
denial is inevitable
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vanity / junk science is science done so upper class people can pretend to be scientists
1) What are you talking about? Do you actually know scientists? Many of them make a decent wage but are not Elon Musk/Bill Gates levels of "upper class" Especially in this case many of them are government so they do not exactly make the most money. 2) These scientists actually have degrees so there is no "pretending". 3) Particle Physics is not "junk science".
give themselves impressive titles
What is your actual complaint? That people who earn doctorates are called "Doctor". This is a DoE experiment so many working on this project may not h
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I work with 'scientists and engineers and some of them feel exactly as I do. I've seen so many projects, departments and companies run into the ground by incompetent upper management that did not rise through the ranks . all i see is a bunch of upper class people hiring each other for their own mutual benefit
let's call it the dilbert effect
if you think there's no classism and that the upper class isn't entitled and that money is power and rich and powerful don't make decisions that benefit only themselves
ar
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I work with 'scientists and engineers and some of them feel exactly as I do. I've seen so many projects, departments and companies run into the ground by incompetent upper management that did not rise through the ranks . all i see is a bunch of upper class people hiring each other for their own mutual benefit
I seriously doubt government scientists call themselves upper class. I seriously doubt they consider themselves pretenders. You're just making things up.
if you think there's no classism and that the upper class isn't entitled and that money is power and rich and powerful don't make decisions that benefit only themselves
Again, we are talking about government scientists. What makes you government employees are "upper class"? These people are not the Jeff Bezos of the world has makes more money in an hour than they make in a few decades. You are still making things up.
are you also going to deny that the entitled upper class is hoarding some 85% of the world's capital?
What part of government employees don't make a lot of money is hard for you to understand?
patronism, cronyism and nepotism are the ways these days
How does that appl
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I seriously doubt government scientists call themselves upper class. I seriously doubt they consider themselves pretenders. You're just making things up.
Again, we are talking about government scientists. What makes you government employees are "upper class"? These people are not the Jeff Bezos of the world has makes more money in an hour than they make in a few decades. You are still making things up.
What part of government employees don't make a lot of money is hard for you to understand?
How does that apply to government scientists again?
Senior people in 'our' bureaucracy never make less than a six figure salary, all have pensions and benefits and came from upper middle class or upper class families. If you've ever been to university, you'd know the competition for tenured positions is brutal. The best indicator of success is family wealth and family highly placed in academia.
"That inequality does have these fundamental sources, and once it’s in place, other mechanisms come in to lock it in and to exacerbate it. That’s where the culture of the 9.9 percent comes in. This culture that focuses on meritocracy becomes a way to justify a professional credentialing game where certain categories of workers are able to carve out high rents for themselves. It’s where certainly families — because they have excess resources — are able to over-invest and lock in benefits. Those are mostly consequences of rising inequality, but then they feed back into it in obvious ways. They lock people in place, they tend to make it harder for large numbers of people to do well, they exacerbate the irrationalities in society."
~ https://www.vox.com/the-goods/... [vox.com]
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Senior people in 'our' bureaucracy never make less than a six figure salary, all have pensions and benefits and came from upper middle class or upper class families.
In the US, upperclass is more than $150K. The average physicist at FermiLab makes $124K a year. That is middle class.
If you've ever been to university, you'd know the competition for tenured positions is brutal. The best indicator of success is family wealth and family highly placed in academia.
Competition for positions does not mean they are rich . Again do you know what upper class means? You have simply lumped anyone who has a PhD as upper class.
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it's called upper middle class, which changes nothing, this is still obviously classism and corruption, and yes, it means these people are affluent and privileged and this is unfair.
compared to the lower class anyone making six figures is upper class and no one would care if poor people weren't homeless, hungry and dying on our streets, which is morally indefensible of course. and if we can't blame the rich and powerful, we sure shouldn't be blaming the poor and powerless, that's cowardly and it's evil
wrong
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also, notice the down votes and how the truth hurts
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With all due respect Big Science is just as corrupt as Big Business and Big Government, not to even mention the Peter Principle.
I sure hate to be the one to burst your bubble but our society is clearly both classist and corrupt.
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With all due respect Big Science is just as corrupt as Big Business and Big Government, not to even mention the Peter Principle.
Everyone is corrupt according to you. So everything looks like a nail said the hammer.
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the reality is giving how well these people are paid and the resources available to them, we could all be doing much better and we should be
like I said, denial, greed and self-justification keep our leaders from grasping the nettle and they won't until it's far too late
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the reality is giving how well these people are paid and the resources available to them, we could all be doing much better and we should be
Dude, how much do you think government employees are paid? You seriously think they are paid a lot? Bahahahahahaha.
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yes, a lot of them are paid a lot, just to be puppets, the real problem is the entitled upper class pulling our strings
people like you let this happen
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nah, just make the upper class play by the same rules as the rest of us.
why should we accept classism and economic exploitation as 'business'?
ethics matter