The big scientific breakthroughs of 2011

From neutrinos to new planets

Upending the laws of physics

Researchers at the CERN laboratory in Geneva announced in September that they’d clocked subatomic particles called neutrinos moving faster than the speed of light. That finding directly contradicts Albert Einstein’s 1905 special theory of relativity, which holds that nothing can outrun light. If neutrinos can, they could arrive at a destination before they even left, opening the prospect of time travel. Or could it be that neutrinos move through an undiscovered fifth dimension, separate from the three dimensions of space and one of time that we know about? Those ideas are so shocking that even the CERN team “wanted to find a mistake” in their data, says team leader Antonio Ereditato. But they didn’t. And so far, further testing has failed to dismiss the finding, says theoretical physicist Matthew Strassler, as “a doorway into something fundamental and deep we don’t know about nature.”

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