PARIS: It's taken more than a century,
but Einstein's celebrated formula e=mc2 has finally been corroborated, thanks to
a heroic computational effort by French, German and Hungarian physicists.
A brainpower consortium led by Laurent Lellouch of France's Centre
for Theoretical Physics, using some of the world's mightiest supercomputers,
have set down the calculations for estimating the mass of protons and neutrons,
the particles at the nucleus of atoms.
According to the conventional
model of particle physics, protons and neutrons comprise smaller particles known
as quarks, which in turn are bound by gluons.
The odd thing is this:
the mass of gluons is zero and the mass of quarks is only five per cent. Where,
therefore, is the missing 95 per cent?
The answer, according to the
study published in the US journal Science yesterday, comes from the energy from
the movements and interactions of quarks and gluons.
In other words,
energy and mass are equivalent, as Einstein proposed in his Special Theory of
Relativity in 1905.
The e=mc2 formula shows that mass can be
converted into energy, and energy can be converted into mass.
By showing
how much energy would be released if a certain amount of mass were to be
converted into energy, the equation has been used many times, most famously as
the inspirational basis for building atomic weapons.
But resolving
e-mc2 at the scale of sub-atomic particles -- in equations called quantum
chromodynamics -- has been fiendishly difficult.
"Until now, this
has been a hypothesis," France's National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS)
said proudly in a press release.