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Re: $1.5 billion: The cost of cutting London-Tokyo latency by 60ms


From: Marshall Eubanks <marshall.eubanks () gmail com>
Date: Fri, 23 Mar 2012 22:11:01 -0400

On Fri, Mar 23, 2012 at 5:14 PM,  <Valdis.Kletnieks () vt edu> wrote:
On Fri, 23 Mar 2012 13:16:59 -0700, George Herbert said:
The physics is not conducive to improving the situation a lot.

There's probably $1.5 billion in the ground already in neutrino
detectors; the total combined detector bit rate is pretty poor.  One
experiment looking at neutrinos coming off the Fermilab accelerator
had 473 million accelerator pulses with under 1.1 million detected
neutrinos.

Note that each pulse was probably millions or even billions of neutrinos, so
the detection rate was even worse than you'd think.  I saw a statistic that
every second, 50 trillion neutrinos pass through your body.  And the number
that will interact is well into the single digits.


Small detection numbers are not, per se, fatal to communication. What
fraction of the photons generated by a GPS satellite are captured by
your phone?

The neutrino interaction rate increases with neutrino energy, and sea
water makes a good neutrino detector. You could, for a billion
dollars, do
a LOT better than they did.

By the way, here is the original paper : http://arxiv.org/pdf/1203.2847v1.pdf

Regards
Marshall


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