But yesterday they announced they had found a couple of snags.
One was a problem with an oscillator on the global positioning system used to track the neutrinos' progress. This may have overestimated their flight time.
The second was with the optical-fibre connector that joins the GPS signals to the master clock at Cern that recorded the result.
Unfortunately, they said, 'this may not have been functioning correctly when the measurements were taken'. They added: 'If this is the case, it could have led to an underestimate of the time of flight of the neutrinos.'
They will have to study these two effects and calculate new measurements that are expected to be released in May.
University of Surrey physicist Professor Jim Al-Khalili, who promised to eat his boxer shorts on live TV if neutrinos were shown to travel faster than light, said: 'I suspect, now more than ever, that both Einstein's theory and my boxer shorts are safe.'
- Daily Mail