I really appreciate you taking the time out of your life to produce these for us
@redbaronsnoopy234610 ай бұрын
As usual, Dr. Lincoln and Fermilab, brilliant update and maintaining the excitement for pure science & research. Thanks to you all. Looking forward to more.
@obviouslytom10 ай бұрын
Grew up 2 blocks from the main entrance of Fermi and always had fun going around the property during my childhood. Was good friends with Dr. Kolb's family for a time as well. Fermi is really the only thing I miss about Illinois.
@Maxfr810 ай бұрын
Grew up here in Aurora, so Fermi was a mainstay for the area, yes.
@chiseldrock10 ай бұрын
all the best in the new year to the whole FERMILAB team. To infinity and beyond!
@gregl479110 ай бұрын
Please keep on producing these outstanding videos. They are without a doubt, among the best science-related videos on KZbin.
@blancaestela5477 ай бұрын
Gracias por compartir tan importantes datos. Felicidades a todo el equipo de Fermilab🎉
@brewdog86269 ай бұрын
My first thought was; who is going round sterilising all of these poor neutrinos and what have they ever done to us? Second thought was; what a bad joke that was but at least I got to see another fancinating video by Dr. Lincon and what fermilab are planning. I look forward to see what is learned. Possibly in a later vid? I could listed to Dr. Lincon for hours and thanks to this channel I have :)
@4draven41810 ай бұрын
Good start to 2024 Dr. Lincoln. Eagerly await further updates.
@milesmcquillen188510 ай бұрын
The most important thing is, we need a petition to bring back the Dr. Don 'stache.
@bennylloyd-willner966710 ай бұрын
Agree, I'm starting to get used to the no-stache face... ...and that is an awful thing to happen with my world😳
@davidschneide542210 ай бұрын
Sometimes, it's the lady's choice. ("no more scratchy head")
@bennylloyd-willner966710 ай бұрын
@@davidschneide5422 if so, she should bow to the science community and deal with it 😁
@windsorek10 ай бұрын
Please don't
@mamamheus77519 ай бұрын
Nope, definitely better looking as he is!
@juandavidgilwiedman10 ай бұрын
Love your work, Mr Lincoln
@PATRIK67KALLBACK10 ай бұрын
Thank you Don for sharing the update!
@Pottery4Life10 ай бұрын
Thank you, Dr. Lincoln.
@MilosevicOgnjan10 ай бұрын
As always, fascinating.... It would be great to have one video about the potential practical applicaitions of such future discoveries that will be made in Fermilab.
@jaspertuin207310 ай бұрын
One thing my wandering mind came up with is using strong, precise neutrino beams as communication encoders/carriers. They would be perfect because they can go trough matter without interacting as ghostly as they are, yet hard to utilise untill we understand them better. But imagine if used for the something like the internet it could mean we can beam data trough the earth to the desired receiver instead of having to rely on our gigantic cable network that goes around the surface, cutting time and making the whole thing operate faster. Also creates options for a more direct peer-to-peer approach for communication. Other things that pop to mind are maybe they can be used for imaging tools for new purposes, like X-ray has. We just need to know them with more precision and how they do interact with other physics. Cool little things, they are! Edit: This starts to sound a lot like sub-space communication from Star Trek hehehe
@exscape10 ай бұрын
Someone with more knowledge can probably come with some specific answers as to how this can help, but it's often the case that research like this leads to technologies that were entirely unintended. If scientists didn't play around with electricity in the 1800s with no real clue of its applications, what would the world look like today? And research into quantum phenomena directly leads to things like better semiconductors and thus modern technology.
@glowerworm10 ай бұрын
The applications are always largely the same with high energy physics. There's usually a few go-to ones: Sometimes learning the rules of our universe don't have obvious applications right now, but will down the line. An example is Einstein coming up with special and general relativity (both seemingly having no use for the layman in the 1930s), and both of those were incredibly important 50 years later when the US needed to perfectly sync 26 satellites in motion to create a Global Position System (GPS, which everybody uses near daily). Another benefit of high energy physics research is the stuff that's invented in the journey. Such as the world wide web (made to share documents at CERN), or better concrete or tunnel-bores or air-motion systems for underground colliders. Which then help mining and city foundation-laying operations worldwide. A third benefit is the actual direct benefits of the discovery, whatever it may be. Sometimes there's an immediate use (such as with electric lightbulbs or xray scans), and sometimes it's a delayed use (such as burning information into a DVD using lasers, or some future radiation proofing of shuttles for trips to Mars. The fourth, more philosophical benefit is that it yields something we can be proud of as humans. A military veteran or congressman might wonder how high energy research might aid in the military defense of the United States. A better thing to wonder is what in the United States is worth defending if not our arts and scientific achievements.
@0neIntangible10 ай бұрын
The ToE neutrino.
@bjornfeuerbacher551410 ай бұрын
@@jaspertuin2073 Considerung how weakly they interact, I'd say they are very impractical both for communication and for imaging. You'd need to emit a _huge_ amount of them so that you can receive even some tiny few at the end. And obviously for emitting a huge amount of them, you'd need a huge amount of energy.
@shazmunchdylbertoid10 ай бұрын
oh wow! I've been so curious about sterile neutrinos lately, this is well timed
@sapelesteve10 ай бұрын
The SBN program sounds amazing Dr. Don! Happy New Year to you & the entire Fermilab team! I am looking forward to what you have in store for us in 2024! 👍👍💥💥
@SolaceEasy10 ай бұрын
Top notch presentation, thanks!
@Ihab.A10 ай бұрын
Dr. Lincoln I love your videos and I am watching your invaluable courses on Wondrium which I love!
@ravenragnar10 ай бұрын
S tier quality video sir.
@TheyCallMeNewb10 ай бұрын
.. What a show (as well as opening and closing cards)!
@Nightscape_10 ай бұрын
It's got be so awesome to work at Fermilab.
@brothermine229210 ай бұрын
2:49 reminds me of a quote about Isis near the end of the "Assignment: Earth" episode of Star Trek: "That, Miss Lincoln, is simply my cat."
@kumagoro10 ай бұрын
that‘s cool - thank you for this video
@tresajessygeorge2107 ай бұрын
THANK YOU... PROF. DR. LINCOLN...!!!
@NorthernChev10 ай бұрын
I love the new DUNE logo.
@ThoughtsAreReal10 ай бұрын
Best wishes to Fermilab and to you, Dr. Don. I've heard about the troubles there and I'd hate to see the best accelerator program in the US go away.
@umbrellajack10 ай бұрын
"Fermilab is awesome" -Fermilab
@umbrellajack10 ай бұрын
(I'm just playing lmao😂)
@maherelachkar447010 ай бұрын
Merry Christmas and happy new year
@bastiaan777777710 ай бұрын
Happy Easter!
@DanielKRui10 ай бұрын
Glad to hear an update. This winter break I watched a lot of older videos about such physics topics, and became obsessed with finding the most recent news.
@FrancisFjordCupola10 ай бұрын
I think of FermiLab as CERNino. Or the smaller non-hadron collider. But I do hope they can learn a lot more about neutrino's.
@cathysandy398610 ай бұрын
I love Dr Don. More videos!😊
@Nudnik110 ай бұрын
Aren't Neutrinos Italian Neutrons? And sterile Neutrinos can't have off spring ? 😮 I worked at BNL /AGS / RHIC we made components for Fermilab shared data etc . Wish they had a channel like this . Excellent 👍
@silentminecraftgamer160110 ай бұрын
Physics is everything! :D
@GM-o6i10 ай бұрын
As a particle physicist, I wish Fermilab success ❤😊 Happy New Year 🌟🌟🌟🙏🙏🙏👍👍👍
@KuK13710 ай бұрын
Sabine Hossenfelder just smeared Dune in several videos out of her anti-accelerator obsession so expect influx of kids calling this program useless garbage...
@Bassotronics10 ай бұрын
Happy 2024! 🎊 🎉
@Condor51210 ай бұрын
Good Morning, Dr. Don 👋😁. Thank You once more for another interesting and informative video. And a 'super thanks' for the links to the other videos. ps: A belated Happy New Year to you and yours. May 2024 bring cool new discoveries in physics.
@mjkluck10 ай бұрын
Good stuff, Doc.
@polanve10 ай бұрын
If sterile neutrinos don't interact via the weak force, how do we detect them?
@fredbloggs807210 ай бұрын
I don't think they can be detected directly, but Fermilab can (hopefully) find out if they truly exist by examining more closely the behavior of the neutrinos that they can detect.
@DrDeuteron10 ай бұрын
it's indirect. It modifies the oscillation vs. propagation behavior in a manner that is inconsistent with 3 states. It's kind of light shinning unpolarized light on a birefringent crystal...you instantly see that light has two different propagation states, but there is no room in the observation to accommodate an unseen 3rd state.
@WilhelmvonFahrvergnugen10 ай бұрын
2:40 consistent with, never proved.
@kbotjammer10 ай бұрын
4:05 Looks like the movie "Event Horizon".
@samwisegamgee465910 ай бұрын
Whoa! Doesn't another type of Neutrino muck up the nice symmetric grid in the Standard Model?
@juliavixen17610 ай бұрын
That "symmetric grid" illustration that everyone puts in pop-sci videos is crap. It's really misleading and leaves out a lot of information. There are other illustrations that are better. If the chart included chirality, then the sterile neutrino would fit into an obvious gap. (Anyway, that chart doesn't show anti-particles, or color charge... there are several different gluons, for example. Above the electroweak unification energy the W±, Z⁰, and photon don't exist, etc. etc.)
@johnpettit688610 ай бұрын
This is crazy, it's a battle with time.
@jamesretired597910 ай бұрын
Please tell us about the bison, and why the floors walls and doors are different colors!
@LynxUrbain10 ай бұрын
Did I understand correctly, or am I totally wrong: You measure a number of electrons and muons in each of the two detectors. Then you compare the proportion of muons / electrons to the total of detected particles (or the proportion between the two kind of particles), for each of the two detectors. Then having obtained the composition of the "particle cocktail", you can determine where you are in the oscillation, for a given distance. Or is it a bit more complicated than that?
@davebright5510 ай бұрын
The beam in the video appears to curve around. How do you steer neutrinos? I thought that due to their low interaction properties they would have to travel from their creation and through both detectors in a straight line
@TheBakedalaskajoe10 ай бұрын
3 cheers for a dune reference.
@johnathanhenley225110 ай бұрын
The spice must flow
@Toocrash10 ай бұрын
An oldtimer likes your contributions, thanks Dr. Don, for showing Fermi Lab
@JonathanJollimore-w9v10 ай бұрын
Neutrinos are really interesting
@GeoffryGifari10 ай бұрын
Huh 500 meters are enough for neutrino to oscillate and detected?
@_John_P10 ай бұрын
They are being artificially produced with energies much smaller than the neutrinos coming from the Sun.
@LeoStaley10 ай бұрын
Question about black holes. I've learned from you and several other physicist explainers on KZbin that an outside observer watching an object fall into a black hole sees it slow down slower and slower approaching the Event Horizon, but never actually fall past the EH. The object falls past the EH normally to itself, but watches all of time pass outside the EH. So how can a black hole grow, from an external perspective, if nothing can ever actually fall into it? And how can an object watch all time pass by as it crosses the EH, if all black holes eventually evaporate in a finite amount of time?
@AlanTheBeast10010 ай бұрын
Zig and zag is metric for flip and flop.
@DrDeuteron10 ай бұрын
no, freedom units use "tomato" and "tomato".
@charlessmith375810 ай бұрын
As Mr. Spock says; fascinating.
@deefeickert110010 ай бұрын
Great presentation and I do have a question. In your video between 6:47 - 7:05 the diagram seems to suggest the neutrino beam can be steered around a curve and through non co-linear detectors. How is this possible since they have no charge?
@CupCakeArmy110 ай бұрын
The protons (red lights) are what are being accelerated and directed at the beam on the far right producing the neutrinos. (green light)
@pluto900010 ай бұрын
The centre of the universe appears to be my head. I see the same distance in all directions.
@Marsubleu10 ай бұрын
A question, maybe for a future video? Why is zero Kelvin the lowest temperature. And then, is there a highest possible temperature?
@douglasstrother658410 ай бұрын
Temperature is a measure of average kinetic energy; 0° Kelvin or 0° Rankine correspond to motionless atoms. The Planck Temperature (~10^32°K) is considered the hottest temperature. Look up "Planck Units"; they are quite a trip.
@bjornfeuerbacher551410 ай бұрын
Temperature is related to high fast particles move. If they don't move at all, you have zero Kelvin. Obviously, moving less than not moving at all is not possible. (Actually, it's a bit more complicated, but that's the essence of the argument.)
@markstyles124610 ай бұрын
@@bjornfeuerbacher5514Really dumb question at "I should be asleep but I'm watching physics" o'clock. What would the temperarure be if the average particle speed was, I guess approached, the speed of light? Would that not be the highest temperature? Not awake enough to puzzle through what maximum means when it is more of a limit, or the fact the particles would be a medium affecting the speed of light.
@bjornfeuerbacher551410 ай бұрын
@@markstyles1246 That depends on how close to the speed of light the average speed is. The closer, the higher the temperature. There is no "highest" temperature there, as you can get arbitrarily close to the speed of light (90%, 99%, 99,9% etc.).
@clemwalton476710 ай бұрын
Sterile neutrinos wow I never imagined
@LaboriousCretin10 ай бұрын
Please build a detector or 2 for C.N.B. (cosmic neutrino background) to start mapping it.
@TheReaverOfDarkness10 ай бұрын
Math describes the world. Physics *_is_* the world.
@bjornfeuerbacher551410 ай бұрын
More like "physics describes the world using math".
@TheReaverOfDarkness10 ай бұрын
@@bjornfeuerbacher5514 Nah, I think humans use math to describe physics.
@bjornfeuerbacher551410 ай бұрын
@@TheReaverOfDarkness Apparently we have a different understand of what "physics" means. :D
@kc7ekk10 ай бұрын
What's so special about liquid argon that you would want to use in DUNE? Why liquid argon and not water or a vacuum or other?
@trucker-lol10 ай бұрын
the real question is, does the black mesa research facility exist, and why you've changed it for working at fermilab dr. lincoln ?
@rickharold788410 ай бұрын
So cool
@LightDiodeNeal10 ай бұрын
Can't wait for every video to ring the bell, cool subject, cool host, cool venue! The world is better off for these videos. Curiosity is the key to "physics is everything", thanks a million
@BiswajitBhattacharjee-up8vv10 ай бұрын
Good news in Good new year 2024. Same for all members of your team who are making huge things for negligible masses since 1970. As my quest these neutrino is propose to take care of missing energy, then how various oscillation states or flavour is right for same energy lose. You are looking for another one could be a whole generation Feel lucky
@PBraggMarinette10 ай бұрын
Fermi IS the good thing about Chicago
@СергейБородин-з3ю10 ай бұрын
Cool as always ...BUT - Might be better without a "switcheroo" - totally crashed my phocus on TJE subject...had to check first what the swicheroo means and rewatch the video again
@stevehowe967710 ай бұрын
Have provisions been made (from a design standpoint) to remove the first detector from the stream to see if the percentages of the different particles change in the second detector.
@alienwarex51i310 ай бұрын
Perfect video when relishing my post-nut clarity
@kidmohair815110 ай бұрын
you have a video about a cat turning into a jaguar and then into a tiger and then back into a cat? great! I'll have to watch that.
@bcubed7210 ай бұрын
How do you "herd" neutrinos into a beam? They only react by the weak force, right?
@supercommie8 ай бұрын
Can you make a video explaining the theoretical rationale for the existence of sterile neutrinos?
@Darkwizzrobe27 күн бұрын
This is the closest thing I could find on that very subject. kzbin.info/www/bejne/m4m3h2iDmd2Gj5I
@taloweryus8 ай бұрын
Is there any likelihood that detecting the neutrinos is somehow affecting their oscillation behavior?
@VikingOlberg-NymoenOfNorway3 ай бұрын
There should be a third detector 2km or more away from the second. Make it easy for you and make it 3.6, could be a higher loss than expected.
@oysteinsoreide432310 ай бұрын
can't measuring the same beam twice affect the results? Are not the beam of neutrinos affected in a way, that may change the outcome of the second detection?
@chrisarmstrong819810 ай бұрын
Since neutrinos are legendary for their (almost) non-existent interactions with everything, how do you form them into a beam and aim them ?
@_John_P10 ай бұрын
They come out of a proton beam aimed at a target. After the protons hit the target, the neutrinos are produced and scatter with greater probability along the path of the protons they originated from.
@chrisarmstrong819810 ай бұрын
@@_John_P Thanks
@richardzeitz547 ай бұрын
Sterile neutrinos are a fertile topic!
@waverod927510 ай бұрын
Wouldn't right handed neutrinos / left handed antineutrinos be sterile? At minimum they would really only interact via gravity.
@_John_P10 ай бұрын
Sterile neutrinos are right-handed neutrinos.
@antumurikks486110 ай бұрын
can graviton have oscillation ? can it turn someting else ? i hope you kind something above Standard Model
@stephenzhao580910 ай бұрын
2:30 ... they might be able to change their identity in a process of subatomic switch loop called neutrino oscillation. 4:56 a paper
@ibrahiymmuhammad477310 ай бұрын
Lim a fan of the anti scoop language
@yasirpanezai569010 ай бұрын
Gravity, wave particle duality and entanglement are invisible forces
@_abdul10 ай бұрын
Thanks Fermilab for NOT Naming it The "Dark Neutrino".
@fredbloggs807210 ай бұрын
I bet they were tempted though.
@bastiaan777777710 ай бұрын
What would be wrong with that?
@bjornfeuerbacher551410 ай бұрын
@@bastiaan7777777 @_abdul The "dark" in "Dark Matter" means that it does not interact with electromagnetic radiation / photons. Since _all_ neutrinos do not interact in that way, essentially _all_ neutrinos are "dark". (And indeed, many physicists indeed include them in the "dark matter".)
@catalinamarquez69372 ай бұрын
😱 OMG Mexico hello I have you in my mind too I have to go back and check some underground places 😅
@andimcc613110 ай бұрын
So to be clear in the experiment diagram at 7:11, in between the three facilities the neutrinos are just passing directly through solid earth, right? I know that's regular for neutrinos but it's still pretty funny
@hugegamer598810 ай бұрын
My cat changes into a tiger every mealtime, then into a panther stalking more food, finally changing back into a cat again only for it to repeat.
@douglasstrother658410 ай бұрын
... and then catnaps until the next "pop" of the can.
@laskey217510 ай бұрын
Getting down to business.
@datapro00710 ай бұрын
Thanks for another great video Don. I always wonder though what the ROI is on these physics experiments i.e. what real-world applications have come from them in say, the last 5 - 10 years?
@DrDeuteron10 ай бұрын
the only real application for neutrino physics (excluding neutrino astronomy) is using neutrino beam under Wall Street to do line-of-sight communication at 0.99999999? the speed of light, beating fiber and EM signals on the surface by micro-to-milli seconds, allowing ultra flash trading. Billions invested, trillions paid out.
@glowerworm10 ай бұрын
The applications are always largely the same with high energy physics. There's usually a few go-to ones: Sometimes learning the rules of our universe don't have obvious applications right now, but will down the line. An example is Einstein coming up with special and general relativity (both seemingly having no use for the layman in the 1930s), and both of those were incredibly important 50 years later when the US needed to perfectly sync 26 satellites in motion to create a Global Position System (GPS, which everybody uses near daily). Another benefit of high energy physics research is the stuff that's invented in the journey. Such as the world wide web (made to share documents at CERN), or better concrete or tunnel-bores or air-motion systems for underground colliders. Which then help mining and city foundation-laying operations worldwide. A third benefit is the actual direct benefits of the discovery, whatever it may be. Sometimes there's an immediate use (such as with electric lightbulbs or xray scans), and sometimes it's a delayed use (such as burning information into a DVD using lasers, or some future radiation proofing of shuttles for trips to Mars. The fourth, more philosophical benefit is that it yields something we can be proud of as humans. A military veteran or congressman might wonder how high energy research might aid in the military defense of the United States. A better thing to wonder is what in the United States is worth defending if not our arts and scientific achievements.
@andreasoberg202110 ай бұрын
What a perfect answer
@EliotMcLellan9 ай бұрын
IF YOU WANTED THE BEST FOR 'FERMILAB' THAT'D PROBABLY REQUIRE THE SEASONS TO COME BACK, REAL WINTER & LESS SLUMMER - WHOLE THING IS GOING TO THE SLUMMER -- EVERYONE CAN TALK ABOUT THE WORLD'S PROBLEMS WITHOUT THE LACK OF SNOW - AND PPL ARE HELD ACCOUNTABLE! THEY ARE TOO STUPID TO DO THE RIGHT THING, AND IT LOOKS LIKE FERMILAB IS GETTING BUNDLED UP WITH THAT, TOO BAD FOR FERMILAB.. TOO HOT - JUST YESTERDAY I WAS IN THE WOODS AND I NOTICED HOW NONSENSE IS KIND OF LIKE THE BEAUTIFUL SHADE AND AURA THAT A NICE EVERGREEN CANOPY CAN PROVIDE, THE COOL OF NONSENSE, WHAT IS SO GOOD ABOUT IT? ITS LIKE THE NICE SHADE IN AN EVERGREEN FOREST, THAT PECULIAR LIGHT - EVENTHOUGH ALL THE TREES ARE GOOD TO GO - TAMPERING & CONTAMINATION & TOO HOT, TOO MUCH POOR QUALITY TO WHICH FERMILAB IS ALSO A VICTIM
10 ай бұрын
Where's the link to the mentioned video about cat turning to a jaguar turning to a tiger?
@causewaykayak10 ай бұрын
It is called "How do you detect a Neutrino" I don't think UTube allows links.
@drdon520510 ай бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/aKDWYqWci72Fea8
@ivance515510 ай бұрын
Since both detectors are on the surface, how will you distinguish between experiment produced neutrinos and those coming from sun
@drdon520510 ай бұрын
Timing, direction, and energy.
@ivance515510 ай бұрын
Thanks a lot, trying to grasp. @@drdon5205
@kenlogsdon709510 ай бұрын
Out of curiosity, a quick Google of solar neutrino flux yielded: "The flux of solar neutrinos at the earth's surface is on the order of 10^11 per square centimeter per second." I can't help but wonder how on Earth (literally) can any experiment discriminate between that density of background neutrino flux and those produced by Fermilab? Is there a good source of info on that?
@drdon520510 ай бұрын
The neutrinos in the beam are all focused in a very small fraction of a second. In addition, they are much higher energy and beamed in a specific direction. Imposing those criteria basically rules out all solar neutrinos.
@nunomaroco58310 ай бұрын
Hi there, did you know about neutrino4 experiment conducted by Anatolii Serebov.......if I understand they detected right handed neutrino.....
@shazmunchdylbertoid10 ай бұрын
is the difference just that sterile neutrinos would be right handed? is it possible (or just consistent) that there would be three generations as well, we just don't expect them to be generated or seen because the weak force is restricted to left handed fermions? this is confusing stuff 🤔
@MatthewSuffidy10 ай бұрын
Does this oscillation require some sort of interaction with matter? If so, you would expect it not to oscillate in open space. Maybe it conserves energy when it interacts as not to violate it?
@DrDeuteron10 ай бұрын
that is a really good question. The answer is NO! and yes, See: Mikheyev-Smirnov-Wolfenstein effect...which requires a beginner graduate level to really understand...it's one of the more subtle effects out there.
@toddhenning830410 ай бұрын
Nice answer DrDeuteron
@DavidEricNemeth4 ай бұрын
I heard and saw news reports that the federal government closed Fermi lab over a decade ago. Is the giant supercollider that was proposed to be built in Texas still being studied by the US senators and representatives? They might be able to detect the smallest parts of the atoms - strings of energy. It is very easy for strings of light to travel to a parallel universe - on a notebook: 😎 It is amazing all a mathematician has to do today is crank out a few trig equations and plug the equations in a computer program today. I could not comprehend calculus, and I took two courses; dropped out last course🤔
@eugen-m10 ай бұрын
can a global network of high-performance neutrino detectors identify, locate and track sources such as nuclear weapons or nuclear submarines in the deep ocean?
@0neIntangible10 ай бұрын
The ToE neutrino.
@leogama342210 ай бұрын
go fermilab go
@ricardoabh324210 ай бұрын
So the sterile neutrino is expected to be massive?
@jamesconlin158110 ай бұрын
Do you think there is a Sterile for each cousin element, and perspective is the reason they can't be seen... like a 2 way mirror works, in essence.