The team which found that  neutrinos may travel faster than light has carried out an improved  version of their experiment - and confirmed the result.
If confirmed by other experiments, the find could undermine one of the basic principles of modern physics.
 Critics of the first report in September had said that the  long bunches of neutrinos (tiny particles) used could introduce an error  into the test.
Critics of the first report in September had said that the  long bunches of neutrinos (tiny particles) used could introduce an error  into the test.The new work used much shorter bunches.
It has been posted to the Arxiv repository and submitted to the Journal of High Energy Physics, but has not yet been reviewed by the scientific community.
The experiments have been carried out by the Opera  collaboration - short for Oscillation Project with Emulsion (T)racking  Apparatus.
It hinges on sending bunches of neutrinos created at the Cern  facility (actually produced as decays within a long bunch of protons  produced at Cern) through 730km (454 miles) of rock to a giant detector  at the INFN-Gran Sasso laboratory in Italy.
The initial series of experiments, comprising 15,000 separate  measurements spread out over three years, found that the neutrinos  arrived 60 billionths of a second faster than light would have,  travelling unimpeded over the same distance.
The idea that nothing can exceed the speed of light in a vacuum forms a  cornerstone in physics - first laid out by James Clerk Maxwell and later  incorporated into Albert Einstein's theory of special relativity.
| Timing is everything Initial analysis of the work by the wider scientific community argued that the relatively long-lasting bunches of neutrinos could introduce a significant error into the measurement. Those bunches lasted 10 millionths of a second - 160 times longer than the discrepancy the team initially reported in the neutrinos' travel time. To address that, scientists at Cern adjusted the way in which the proton beams were produced, resulting in bunches just three billionths of a second long. When the Opera team ran the improved experiment 20 times, they found almost exactly the same result. | 
"This is reinforcing the previous finding and  ruling out some possible systematic errors which could have in principle  been affecting it," said Antonio Ereditato of the Opera collaboration.
"We didn't think they were, and now we have the proof," he  told BBC News. "This is reassuring that it's not the end of the story."
The first announcement  of evidently faster-than-light neutrinos caused a stir worldwide; the  Opera collaboration is very aware of its implications if eventually  proved correct.
The error in the length of the bunches, however, is just the  largest among several potential sources of uncertainty in the  measurement, which must all now be addressed in turn; these mostly  centre on the precise departure and arrival times of the bunches.
| "So far no arguments have been put forward that rule out our effect," Dr Ereditato said. "This additional test we made is confirming our original finding, but still we have to be very prudent, still we have to look forward to independent confirmation. But this is a positive result." That confirmation may be much longer in coming, as only a few facilities worldwide have the detectors needed to catch the notoriously flighty neutrinos - which interact with matter so rarely as to have earned the nickname "ghost particles". Next year, teams working on two other experiments at Gran Sasso experiments - Borexino and Icarus - will begin independent cross-checks of Opera's results. The US Minos experiment and Japan's T2K experiment will also test the observations. It is likely to be several months before they report back. Read more Environment Clean Generations Popsci | 
 
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