http://www.spacedaily.com/news/physics-05zq.html

If subatomic particles had personalities, neutrinos would be the 
ultimate wallflowers. One of the most basic particles of matter in the 
universe, they've been around for 14 billion years and permeate every 
inch of space, but they're so inconceivably tiny that they've been 
called "almost nothing" and pass straight through things - for 
example, the Earth - without a bump.
So it's easy to see why no one thought they existed until the 1930s, 
and why it wasn't until the 1950s that scientists were finally able to 
confirm their inconspicuous presence. It's also easy to see why their 
masses, once believed to be zero, remain so elusive, but could help 
unlock the universe's mysteries on everything from dark matter to the 
births of galaxies.

With a Precision Measurement Grant from the National Institute of 
Standards and Technology that will provide up to $150,000 in funding 
over three years, Florida State University research physicist Edmund 
G. Myers, in Tallahassee, Fla., and student researchers hope to meet 
part of that challenge by measuring the precise difference in mass of 
tritium, a form of hydrogen, and helium-3 atoms. This will help pin 
down the mass of the electron neutrino.

To make such a measurement, Myers will use the state-of-the-art 
Penning trap that he brought to FSU from the Massachusetts Institute 
of Technology in 2003. It's arguably the most precise equipment made 
for the purpose of determining atomic mass.

"With neutrino mass, the game is to keep lowering the upper limit 
until you find it," Myers said.

Right now, that ceiling is around 2 electron Volts (eV). Myers' work, 
combined with results from other experiments, could drop this by a 
factor of at least 10, to 0.2 eV or even lower. By comparison, an 
electron, which is probably the lightest commonly known subatomic 
particle, has a mass of 511,000 eV.

Myers was one of two recipients of this year's Precision Measurement 
Grants, which the National Institute of Standards and Technology has 
been awarding since 1970. Among the 34 applications, Myers' research 
stood out because it so snugly fit the institute's mission to support 
physics research at the most fundamental level, said Peter Mohr, the 
institute's grant program manager.

"What he's doing is very precise measurements," Mohr said. "The 
results are very important."

*****************************************************************************

I'm having a bit of trouble envisioning how voltage is equivalent to 
mass.

I'm guessing that voltage in the electrical sense is not exactly the 
same as eV in the electron sense, or is it?

Voltage is electrical pressure. Is eV the pressure an electron exerts 
on its environment?



xponent

I'm A Dummy Maru

rob


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