Are OPERA neutrinos faster than light because of non-inertial reference frames?
Claudio Germana

TL;DR
This paper investigates whether the reported superluminal neutrino speeds in the OPERA experiment could be explained by non-inertial reference frame effects and relativistic time synchronization issues, potentially supporting general relativity.
Contribution
It introduces a method to analyze OPERA neutrino timing data considering non-inertial Earth clocks and relativistic effects, offering an alternative explanation for the superluminal results.
Findings
TOF distributions are shorter by tens of ns due to relativistic corrections
Neutrino arrival times may be affected by Earth's non-inertial reference frame
Experiment timing could be consistent with light speed when accounting for relativistic effects
Abstract
Recent results from the OPERA experiment reported a neutrino beam traveling faster than light. The experiment measured the neutrino time of flight (TOF) over a baseline from the CERN to the Gran Sasso site. The neutrino beam arrives 60 ns earlier than a light ray would do. Because the result has an enormous impact on science, it might be worth double-checking the time definitions with respect to the non-inertial system in which the neutrino travel time was measured. Potential problems in the OPERA data analysis connected with the definition of the reference frame and time synchronization are emphasized. We aim to investigate the synchronization of non-inertial clocks on Earth by relating this time to the proper time of an inertial observer at Solar System Barycenter(SSB). The Tempo2 software was used to time-stamp events observed on the geoid with respect to the SSB inertial observer…
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