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Date: Fri, 9 Jul 2004 09:21:41 -0700 (PDT)
From: Party of Citizens <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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Subject: [PERSIANS-JEWS-FLIES] c = ED2 (ED stands for Edomite Dogma)

Speed of light may have changed recently
http://www.newscientist.com/news/print.jsp?id=ns99996092
                               19:00 30 June 04

       The speed of light, one of the most sacrosanct of the universal
      physical constants, may have been lower as recently as two billion
    years ago - and not in some far corner of the universe, but right here
                                  on Earth.

        The controversial finding is turning up the heat on an already
     simmering debate, especially since it is based on re-analysis of old
     data that has long been used to argue for exactly the opposite: the
             constancy of the speed of light and other constants.

    A varying speed of light contradicts Einstein's theory of relativity,
     and would undermine much of traditional physics. But some physicists
      believe it would elegantly explain puzzling cosmological phenomena
    such as the nearly uniform temperature of the universe. It might also
        support string theories that predict extra spatial dimensions.

      The threat to the idea of an invariable speed of light comes from
    measurements of another parameter called the fine structure constant,
     or alpha, which dictates the strength of the electromagnetic force.
      The speed of light is inversely proportional to alpha, and though
        alpha also depends on two other constants (see graphic), many
      physicists tend to interpret a change in alpha as a change in the
    speed of light. It is a valid simplification, says Victor Flambaum of
                 the University of New South Wales in Sydney.

       It was Flambaum, along with John Webb and colleagues, who first
    seriously challenged alpha's status as a constant in 1998. Then, after
    exhaustively analysing how the light from distant quasars was absorbed
        by intervening gas clouds, they claimed in 2001 that alpha had
        increased by a few parts in 10^5 in the past 12 billion years.

                           Natural nuclear reactor

     But then German researchers studying photons emitted by caesium and
     hydrogen atoms reported earlier in June that they had seen no change
     in alpha to within a few parts in 10^15 over the period from 1999 to
     2003 ([3]New Scientist, 26 June) though the result does not rule out
                that alpha was changing billions of years ago.

      Throughout the debate, physicists who argued against any change in
      alpha have had one set of data to fall back on. It comes from the
     world's only known natural nuclear reactor, found at Oklo in Gabon,
                                 West Africa.

        The Oklo reactor started up nearly two billion years ago when
      groundwater filtered through crevices in the rocks and mixed with
       uranium ore to trigger a fission reaction that was sustained for
    hundreds of thousands of years. Several studies that have analysed the
     relative concentrations of radioactive isotopes left behind at Oklo
    have concluded that nuclear reactions then were much the same as they
               are today, which implies alpha was the same too.

    That is because alpha directly influences the ratio of these isotopes.
     In a nuclear chain reaction like the one that occurred at Oklo, the
      fission of each uranium-235 nucleus produces neutrons, and nearby
                      nuclei can capture these neutrons.

     For example, samarium-149 captures a neutron to become samarium-150,
     and since the rate of neutron capture depends on the value of alpha,
    the ratio of the two samarium isotopes in samples collected from Oklo
                       can be used to calculate alpha.

       A number of studies done since Oklo was discovered have found no
    change in alpha over time. "People started quoting the reactor [data]
       as firm evidence that the constants hadn't changed," says Steve
    Lamoreaux of Los Alamos National Lab (LANL) in Los Alamos, New Mexico.

                               Energy spectrum

       Now, Lamoreaux, along with LANL colleague Justin Torgerson, has
       re-analysed the Oklo data using what he says are more realistic
        figures for the energy spectrum of the neutrons present in the
        reactor. The results have surprised him. Alpha, it seems, has
    decreased by more than 4.5 parts in 10^8 since Oklo was live (Physical
                         Review D, vol 69, p121701).

       That translates into a very small increase in the speed of light
    (assuming no change in the other constants that alpha depends on), but
       Lamoreaux's new analysis is so precise that he can rule out the
        possibility of zero change in the speed of light. "It's pretty
                             exciting," he says.

      So far the re-examination of the Oklo data has not drawn any fire.
       "The analysis is fine," says Thibault Damour of the Institute of
    Advanced Scientific Studies (IHES) in Bures-sur-Yvette in France, who
      co-authored a 1996 Oklo study that found no change in alpha. Peter
      Moller of LANL, who, along with Japanese researchers, published a
      paper in 2000 about the Oklo reactor that also found no change in
           alpha, says that Lamoreaux's assumptions are reasonable.

    The analysis might be sound, and the assumptions reasonable, but some
      physicists are reluctant to accept the conclusions. "I can't see a
        particular mistake," says Flambaum. "However, the claim is so
        revolutionary there should be many independent confirmations."

     While Flambaum's own team found that alpha was different 12 billion
    years ago, the new Oklo result claims that alpha was changing as late
     as two billion years ago. If other methods confirm the Oklo finding,
       it will leave physicists scrambling for new theories. "It's like
    opening a gateway," says Dmitry Budker, a colleague of Lamoreaux's at
                  the University of California at Berkeley.

                               Horizon problem

    Some physicists would happily accept a variable alpha. For example, if
      it had been lower in the past, meaning a higher speed of light, it
                      would solve the "horizon problem".

     Cosmologists have struggled to explain why far-flung regions of the
     universe are at roughly the same temperature. It implies that these
      regions were once close enough to exchange energy and even out the
      temperature, yet current models of the early universe prevent this
    from happening, unless they assume an ultra-fast expansion right after
                                the big bang.

    However, a higher speed of light early in the history of the universe
     would allow energy to pass between these areas in the form of light.

    Variable "constants" would also open the door to theories that used to
     be off limits, such as those which break the laws of conservation of
    energy. And it would be a boost to versions of string theory in which
      extra dimensions change the constants of nature at some places in
                                 space-time.

       But "there is no accepted varying-alpha theory", warns Flambaum.
       Instead, there are competing theories, from those that predict a
         linear rate of change in alpha, to those that predict rapid
    oscillations. John Barrow, who has pioneered varying-alpha theories at
    the University of Cambridge, says that the latest Oklo result does not
     favour any of the current theories. "You would expect alpha to stop
             [changing] five to six billion years ago," he says.

                                Reaction rate

    Before Lamoreaux's Oklo study can count in favour of any varying alpha
      theory, there are some issues to be addressed. For one, the exact
     conditions at Oklo are not known. Nuclear reactions run at different
      rates depending on the temperature of the reactor, which Lamoreaux
                      assumed was between 227 and 527�C.

     Damour says the temperature could vary far more than this. "You need
    to reconstruct the temperature two billion years ago deep down in the
                              ground," he says.

       Damour also argues that the relative concentrations of samarium
    isotopes may not be as well determined as Lamoreaux has assumed, which
        would make it impossible to rule out an unchanging alpha. But
     Lamoreaux points out that both assumptions about the temperature of
     the Oklo reactor and the ratio of samarium isotopes were accepted in
                            previous Oklo studies.

    Another unknown is whether other physical constants might have varied
    along with, or instead of, alpha. Samarium-149's ability to capture a
    neutron also depends on another constant, alpha(s), which governs the
    strength of the strong nuclear attraction between the nucleus and the
                                   neutron.

     And in March, Flambaum claimed that the ratio of different elements
      left over from just after the big bang suggests that alpha(s) must
       have been different then compared with its value today (Physical
                         Review D, vol 69, p 063506).

     While Lamoreaux has not addressed any possible change in alpha(s) in
     his Oklo study, he argues that it is important to focus on possible
    changes in alpha because the Oklo data has become such a benchmark in
     the debate over whether alpha can vary. "I've spent my career going
     back and checking things that are 'known' and it always leads to new
                               ideas," he says.




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