ROME, (Reuters) – The Italian professor who led an experiment which initially appeared to challenge one of the fundaments of modern physics by showing particles moving faster than the speed of light, has resigned after the finding was overturned earlier this month.
Italy’s national institute of nuclear physics INFN said yesterday that Antonio Ereditato had stepped down as coordinator of the so-called OPERA experiment but had no comment beyond saying it “took note” of his decision. It was not immediately possible to reach Ereditato for a comment.
The experiment measuring the speed at which sub-atomic particles called neutrinos travelled from the CERN research centre in Geneva to Gran Sasso in central Italy at first appeared to show they had flown the 730 km stretch 60 billionths of a second faster than light.
Had it been confirmed, the finding would have disproved Albert Einstein’s 1905 Special Theory of Relativity, one of the foundations of modern physics and cosmology, which holds that nothing in the universe can travel faster than light.