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posted by martyb on Saturday December 24 2016, @07:38AM   Printer-friendly
from the answer-is-42 dept.

Physicists have failed to find disintegrating protons, throwing into limbo the beloved theory that the forces of nature were unified at the beginning of time.

For 20 years, physicists in Japan have monitored a 13-story-tall tank of pure water cloistered deep inside an abandoned zinc mine, hoping to see protons in the water spontaneously fall apart. In the meantime, a Nobel Prize has been won for a different discovery in the cathedral-esque water tank pertaining to particles called neutrinos. But the team looking for proton decays — events that would confirm that three of the four forces of nature split off from a single, fundamental force at the beginning of time — is still waiting.

"So far, we never see this proton decay evidence," said Makoto Miura of the University of Tokyo, who leads the Super-Kamiokande experiment's proton decay search team.

Different "grand unified theories" or "GUTs" tying together the strong, weak and electromagnetic forces make a range of predictions about how long protons take to decay. Super-K's latest analysis finds that the subatomic particles must live, on average, at least 16 billion trillion trillion years, an increase from the minimum proton lifetime of 13 billion trillion trillion years that the team calculated in 2012. The findings, released in October and under review for publication in Physical Review D, rule out a greater range of the predicted proton lifetimes and leave the beloved, 1970s-era grand unification hypothesis as an unproven dream. "By far the most likely way we would ever verify this idea is proton decay," said Stephen Barr, a physicist at the University of Delaware.

Without proton decay, the evidence that the forces that govern elementary particles today are actually splinters of a single "grand unified" force is purely circumstantial: The three forces seem to converge to the same strengths when extrapolated to high energies, and their mathematical structures suggest inclusion in a larger whole, much as the shape of Earth's continents hint at the ancient supercontinent Pangea.

"You have these fragments and they fit together so perfectly," Barr said. "Most people think it can't be an accident."

[Continues...]

[Ed. additions follow.] The article proceeds to explain the background on possible models that support grand-unified theories, explains symmetry groups and interchangeability of different quark charges, as well as the potential implications depending on positive or negative findings.

For those who are unfamiliar with the topic, Wikipedia helpfully summarizes:

A Grand Unified Theory (GUT) is a model in particle physics in which at high energy, the three gauge interactions of the Standard Model which define the electromagnetic, weak, and strong interactions or forces, are merged into one single force. This unified interaction is characterized by one larger gauge symmetry and thus several force carriers, but one unified coupling constant. If Grand Unification is realized in nature, there is the possibility of a grand unification epoch in the early universe in which the fundamental forces are not yet distinct.

Are there any Soylentils who could elaborate on what the impact might be should a GUT be confirmed? Where would we go from there?


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  • (Score: 2) by Unixnut on Saturday December 24 2016, @12:27PM

    by Unixnut (5779) on Saturday December 24 2016, @12:27PM (#445521)

    > For 20 years, physicists in Japan have monitored a 13-story-tall tank of pure water cloistered deep inside an abandoned zinc mine, hoping to see protons in the water spontaneously fall apart.

    I never thought I could imagine something more tedious to do than sit and watch paint dry, but physicists in Japan have managed. Thank you!

    I cannot imagine how it must be when you have to explain to non-physicists what you do for a living...

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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday December 25 2016, @07:30AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday December 25 2016, @07:30AM (#445754)

    But they got robots to watch it dry for them.