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Neutrinos: Little Neutrons. Not!

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Title: Neutrinos: Little Neutrons. Not!


1
Neutrinos Little Neutrons. Not!
2
Discovery of Radioactivity
  • In 1895 Roentgen discovered that when electrons
    accelerated by very high voltages struck hard
    surfaces, any photographic plate in the vicinity
    would get exposed and fluorescent materials in
    the region around would glow. Roentgen thus
    concluded that some radiation was being emitted
    and called it X-rays.
  • Radiograph made by roentgen in 1895 of his wifes
    hand
  • For this discovery, he receives the first physics
    Nobel price in 1901.
  • Today, those "X rays" are well known to be a
    particular type of light, that is photons of high
    energy
  • Others (Bequerel and Rutherford) discover that
    uranium emits a kind of radiation called alpha
    and beta rays.

3
Beta Decay
  • In certain types of radioactive decay, an
    electron or positron is emitted. The electron
    (or positron) was referred to as a beta
    particle before people knew what it was, and this
    type of process is referred to as beta decay
  • Example Copper decaying to nickel
  • When this decay was first studied, it looked like
    one particle (the copper atom) decayed to just 2
    other particles the nickel and the positron.
  • If this were the case, then the positron would
    have a very distinct energy. But when it is
    measured, the positron energy varies over a large
    range.
  • This is not possible if energy and momentum are
    to be conserved!
  • http//hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/nuclear
    /beta.html

4
Pauli neutrino
  • Wolfgang Pauli came up with a solution to save
    Conservation of Energy he proposed a completely
    new particle, which as far as he knew, didnt
    exist!
  • He was so unsure of this that he didnt even name
    his own particle.
  • Enrico Fermi named it the Neutrino (little
    neutral one)

Dear Radioactive Ladies and Gentlemen, .., how
because of the "wrong" statistics of the N and
Li6 nuclei and the continuous beta spectrum, I
have hit upon a desperate remedy to save the
"exchange theorem" of statistics and the law of
conservation of energy. Namely, the possibility
that there could exist in the nuclei electrically
neutral particles, that I wish to call neutrons,
.I agree that my remedy could seem incredible
because one should have seen these neutrons much
earlier if they really exist.
http//www.ethbib.ethz.ch/exhibit/pauli/neutrino_e
.html
5
How to Find Neutrinos?
  • Although Paulis neutrino was a good solution, no
    one knew if it was the right solution!
  • The big problem is that neutrinos are very weakly
    interacting
  • A neutrino would not notice a lead barrier 50
    light-years thick!
  • But physicists started incorporating the neutrino
    into their calculations
  • In 1945, the first atomic bomb explodes. Despite
    of the horror it inspires, it is for the
    physicists a remarkable powerful source of
    neutrinos (assuming they exist).
  • Frederick Reines, who is working at Los Alamos,
    speaks to Fermi in 1951 about his project to
    place a neutrino detector near an atomic
    explosion.

http//wwwlapp.in2p3.fr/neutrinos/anhistory.html
6
Reines Cowan
  • In 1952, Reines and Clyde Cowan decide to use a
    more peaceful source of neutrinos the nuclear
    plant of Hanford, Washington.
  • They use a target made of around 400 liters of a
    mixture of water and cadmium chloride.
  • The anti-neutrino coming from the nuclear reactor
    interacts with a proton of the target matter,
    making a positron and a neutron.
  • The positron annihilates with an electron of the
    surrounding material, giving two simultaneous
    photons
  • the neutron slows down until it is eventually
    captured by a cadmium nucleus, implying the
    emission of photons some 15 microseconds after
    those of the positron annihilation.
  • All those photons are detected and the 15
    microseconds identify the neutrino interaction.
  • The neutrino is detected in 1956!

Reines receives Nobel prize in 1995
7
Observation of neutrinos
  • http//hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/particl
    es/cowan.html

8
What other kinds of neutrinos are there?
  • It turns out that Reines and Cowan discovered the
    anti-electron-neutrino.
  • The electron-neutrino is discovered in 1957 by
    Goldhaber, Grodzins and Sunyar
  • Muon neutrinos are discovered in 1962 by Leon
    Lederman, Mel Schwartz, Jack Steinberger and
    colleagues at Brookhaven National Laboratories
    and it is confirmed that they are different from
    electron neutrinos
  • The tau lepton is discovered by Martin Perl and
    colleagues at SLAC in Stanford, California. 
    After several years, analysis of tau decay modes
    leads to the conclusion that tau is accompanied 
    by its own tau neutrino
  • As far as we know, there are only these 3
    neutrinos.

9
The mass of the neutrinos
  • As each neutrino was discovered, physicists tried
    to measure their mass.
  • But they only got so far as to say they are very
    very light
  • In fact, the Standard Model which describes all
    of the fundamental particles has the neutrinos as
    having ZERO mass
  • An important implication if neutrinos are
    massless, then they MUST travel at the speed of
    light!
  • (Keep this in mind it will become important
    later!)

10
Neutrino sources
  • Solar neutrinos From the process of
    thermonuclear fusion inside a star. Also
    produced copiously by supernovae. Our sun
    produces about 2x1038 per second total.
  • Neutrinos from nuclear reactors and
    accelerators A standard nuclear power plant
    radiates about 5x 1020 neutrinos per second) and
    their energy is around 4 MeV.
  • Neutrinos from natural radioactivity on the
    earth The power coming from this natural
    radioactivity is estimated at about 20,000 Giga
    Watts (about 20,000 nuclear plants!) and the
    neutrinos coming from this radioactivity are
    numerous about 6 millions per second and per
    cm2.
  • Neutrinos from cosmic rays When a cosmic ray
    (proton coming from somewhere in space)
    penetrates the atmosphere, it interacts with an
    atomic nucleus and this generates a particles
    shower. They are called "atmospheric
    neutrinos".
  • Neutrinos from the Big-Bang The "standard"
    model of the Big-Bang predicts, like for the
    photons, a cosmic background of neutrinos. There
    are about 330 neutrinos per cm3. But their energy
    is theoretically so little (about 0.0004 eV),
    that no experiment, even very huge, has been able
    to detect them.

http//wwwlapp.in2p3.fr/neutrinos/ansources.html
11
Importance of Neutrinos
  • In the universe, there are
  • about 1 billion photons per cubic meter
  • About 100 million per cubic meter of neutrinos of
    each type (electron,muon, tau), or 300 million
    total
  • About 0.5 protons per cubic meter

12
Solar Fusion
  • The evidence is strong that the overall reaction
    is "burning" hydrogen to make helium
  • 4H 2 e --gt 4He 2 neutrinos 6 photons
  • Why do we think that this is what goes on?
  • Energy output of millions of eV per reaction is
    needed if the Sun has been producing energy at
    the observed rate over billions of years.
  • The reactions exist. (They have been studied in
    the laboratory.)
  • There is a consistent step-by-step theory for the
    reaction.

http//ideaplace.org/Why/FusionE.html
13
Solar Neutrinos
  • We know how many of these reactions happen per
    second in the Sun because we know how much energy
    each reaction releases and we know the solar
    luminosity. Thus we know how many neutrinos the
    Sun is producing per second about 2x1038
  • Then we can calculate how many neutrinos are
    arriving at Earth. The answer is about 1014 per
    square meter per second - all moving away from
    the Sun at the speed of light.
  • Wait one second a thousand trillion solar
    neutrinos just went through your body! Ouch!

http//zebu.uoregon.edu/soper/Sun/solarneutrinos.
html
14
Homestake Gold Mine
  • Ray Davis decides to see neutrinoes from the
    sun.
  • To do this he filled a huge vat with cleaning
    fluid. I am not making this up!
  • The pioneering experiment in this direction was
    performed deep in the Homestake Gold Mine in
    South Dakota starting in the early 1970's. The
    experiment is deep underground to protect it from
    high energy particles from outer space called
    cosmic rays. The detection method was based on
    the reaction
  • 37Cl neutrino --gt 37Ar electron.
  • Chlorine, Cl has 17 protons while argon, Ar has
    18 protons. Thus one neutron got converted into a
    proton.
  • After a few days, the argon decays back to
    chlorine
  • 37Ar --gt 37Cl neutrino antielectron .
  • Result About 1/3 of the expected number of
    reactions occurred.
  • http//zebu.uoregon.edu/soper/Sun/solarneutrinos.
    html

15
Kamiokande
  • Masatoshi Koshiba followed up on the measurements
    made by Ray Davis by developing a large
    water-filled detector, called Kamiokande, in a
    Japanese mine. Kamiokande was direction sensitive
    and could confirm Davis' discovery that neutrinos
    came from the sun. The Kamiokande water tank was
    lined with photomultipliers. When neutrinos enter
    the tank, they can interact with electrons. These
    produce flashes of light, which are registered by
    the photomultipliers.
  • Result Neutrino reactions detected, but not as
    many as expected based on the theoretical
    calculations.
  • But Kamiokande also saw something else even more
    surprising!

http//www.nobel.se/physics/laureates/2002/illpres
/kamiokande.html
16
Seeing a SuperNova with Neutrinos!
  • Kamiokande was operating on 23 February 1987 and
    detected 12 neutrinos emitted by supernova 1987A
    when it exploded 170,000 light years from the
    earth the first clear observation of neutrinos
    produced outside our galaxy.
  • If you were in a Jupiter-type orbit a billion
    kilometers from SN1987A when it exploded and were
    protected from the other effects of the
    supernova, you would be killed by the radiation
    damage from neutrinos streaming through your body
  • SN1987A probably produced 1058 neutrinos
  • Based on the number and energy of the neutrinos,
    the energy released by the SN was about 1053
    ergs/sec compared to sun 1033 erg/sec
  • But the neutrinos dont all arrive at the same
    time!
  • Based on the direction, they came from Large
    Megellenic cloud

17
1987 all growed up!
18
Atmospheric neutrinos
  • Kamiokande, and other experiments like it (like
    IMB) also looked for atmospheric neutrinos,
    which come from cosmic rays not the sun.
  • All of these experiments looked for electron
    neutrinos, and muon neutrinos.
  • Problem they did not see as many muon neutrinos
    as expected this is the anomaly
  • When physicists have a problem like this, there
    is only one thing to do build a bigger
    experiment!
  • And give it a snappy name SuperK!

19
SuperKamioka
  • In 1990, in order to make more progress int hese
    fields of research, construction was started on
    the 50,000 ton water Cerenkov detector,
    Super-Kamiokande (Super-KAMIOKA Nucleon Decay
    Experiment or Neutrino Detection Experiment).
    Super-Kamiokande is bigger and has greater
    photocathode coverage than Kamiokande.
    Construction was completed in 1995 and
    observation began in April of 1996.

20
SuperK Event
  • 481 MeV muon neutrino (MC) produces 394 MeV muon
    which later decays at rest into 52 MeV electron.
  • Size of PMT corresponds to amount of light seen
    by the PMT. PMTs are drawn as a flat squares even
    though in reality they look more like huge
    flattened golden light bulbs.

muon
Muon neutrino
electron
http//www.ps.uci.edu/tomba/sk/tscan/pictures.htm
l
21
Events point at the sun
  • Super-K detects Boron-8 neutrinos when they
    scatter off of atomic electrons in the water. The
    recoil electron direction is oriented along the
    direction of neutrino travel (as in the banner at
    the top of this page). The electron makes a weak
    Cherenkov ring in the detector- only 40-50 PMT
    hits are expected for a 8 MeV electron (in a
    narrow time window, shown as bright green hits in
    this event display). At this low energy, there is
    considerable random background, mostly from radon
    gas in the water. So we count solar neutrinos by
    making an angular distribution with respect to
    the sun's known direction. This is shown if the
    figure below the sharp peak near cosine equals
    one is due to solar neutrinos. The area under the
    peak, after subtracting background, is the
    measured number of solar neutrinos.
  • http//hep.bu.edu/superk/solar.html

Pointing at sun
Pointing away from sun
22
SuperKamioka
  • Only(!) 500 days worth of data was needed to
    produce this "neutrino image" of the Sun, using
    Super-K to detect the neutrinos from nuclear
    fusion in the solar interior. Centered on the
    Sun's postion, the picture covers a significant
    fraction of the sky (90x90 degrees in R.A. and
    Dec.). Brighter colors represent a larger flux of
    neutrinos.
  • The little blue dot is what the size of the sun
    would look like in the visible spectrum (using
    photons)
  • http//antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap980605.html
  • Credit R. Svoboda and K. Gordan (LSU) Jun 5,
    1998

23
What else did SuperK do with Neutrinos?
  • Also looked at Atmospheric Neutrinos
  • Predictions exist for how many they should see
  • SuperK discovered a deficit in muon neutrinos!
    They disappeared!
  • And discovered that muon neutrinos which come
    upward (through the earth) are more likely to
    disappear. Hmmm
  • Disappear is not quite right they oscillate
    into something else an electron neutrino!
  • This can only happen if neutrinos have Mass!

24
Clinton on Neutrinos
  • We must help you to ensure that America
    continues to lead the revolution in science and
    technology. Growth is a prerequisite for
    opportunity, and scientific research is a basic
    prerequisite for growth. Just yesterday in Japan,
    physicists announced a discovery that tiny
    neutrinos have mass. Now, that may not mean much
    to most Americans, but it may change our most
    fundamental theories -- from the nature of the
    smallest subatomic particles to how the universe
    itself works, and indeed how it expands.
  • This discovery was made, in Japan, yes, but it
    had the support of the investment of the U.S.
    Department of Energy. This discovery calls into
    question the decision made in Washington a couple
    of years ago to disband the Super-conducting
    Supercollider, and it reaffirms the importance of
    the work now being done at the Fermi National
    Acceleration Facility in Illinois.
  • The larger issue is that these kinds of findings
    have implications that are not limited to the
    laboratory. They affect the whole of society --
    not only our economy, but our very view of life,
    our understanding of our relations with others,
    and our place in time.

25
Meanwhile
  • BATAVIA, IL--President Bush met with members of
    the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory
    research team Monday to discuss a mathematical
    error he recently discovered in the famed
    laboratory's "Improved Determination Of Tau
    Lepton Paths From Inclusive Semileptonic B-Meson
    Decays" report.           "I'm somewhat out of
    my depth here," said Bush, a longtime Fermilab
    follower
  • Above Bush shows Fermilab scientists where they
    went wrong in their calculations.

26
Are Neutrinos Dark Matter?
  • Neutrinos dont shine. And now we know they
    have mass. And there sure are a lot of them.
    Dark Matter!?
  • This mass difference, coupled with absolute
    neutrino mass measurements and the Kamiokande's
    measurements, indicates that the combined mass of
    all the neutrinos in the universe is about equal
    to the combined mass of all the visible stars.
    That means neutrinos cannot account for all the
    "dark matter" known to make up most of the mass
    of the universe.

27
Summary
  • What we know
  • There are 3 light neutrinos
  • The sun is a copious source of neutrinos
  • Supernovae produce a lot of neutrinos
  • Neutrinos have mass
  • What we dont know
  • What are the masses of the 3 neutrinos reallY?
  • How do we find out?
  • Would be great if there was a way to control the
    neutrinos to study them in more detail
  • But wait! There is! Fermilab can make a lot of
    neutrinos too!

28
Making a Beam of Neutrinos
120 GeV protons hit target (1020/Protons per
year!) p (pions) produced at wide range of
angles Magnetic horns to focus p p decay
to mn in long evacuated pipe Left-over
hadrons shower in hadron absorber Rock
shield ranges out m n beam travels
through earth to experiment
But the experiment is hundreds of miles
away!
29
Numi-MINOS from the Air
NUMI Neutrinos at the Main Injector MINOS Main
Injector Neutrino Oscillation Search
So the neutrinos start out at Fermilab, and are
aimed through the earth at Minnesota. Why
Minnesota?
30
MINOS Experiment
Two Detector NeutrinoOscillation
Experiment(Start 2004)
Near Detector 980 tons
Far Detector 5400 tons
31
Beam and Near Detector
  • Tunneling completed
  • Detector elements built
  • Installation starts later this year
  • First beam December 2004

Decay tunnel before installation of decay pipe
Near detector hall
32
The Far Detector
33
Minos Plans
  • The basic plan of MINOS is to use the controlled
    source of neutrinos from Fermilab to really show
    that muon neutrinos can oscillate into electron
    neutrinos
  • Compare interactions in the near detector with
    the far detector
  • Both detectors will be able to determine the type
    of neutrinos
  • Basic measurement the mass difference between
    the two neutrinos (not the actual masses)
  • Will the experiment soar to great heights?
  • Or will it come crashing down to earth?

34
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35
  • Solar neutrinos are produced by the nuclear
    reactions that power the Sun. The fusion of
    proton plus proton (pp) to deuterium plus
    positron plus neutrino is responsible for 98 of
    the energy production of the sun. Therefore these
    pp-neutrinos are the most plentiful, and the most
    reliably estimated. About 60 billion pp-neutrinos
    pass through a square centimeter at the Earth
    each second. They are relatively low energy,
    however, with a continuous spectrum that ends at
    420 keV. In addition, there are several rarer
    reactions which also produce neutrinos. The
    electron capture on Beryllium-7 produces a sharp
    line of Beryllium-7 neutrinos at 861 keV. A small
    fraction of the time, Beryllium-7 captures a
    proton instead of an electron, to form Boron-8.
    The beta decay of Boron-8
  • 8B -gt 8Be e nu_e
  • produces a continuous spectrum of neutrino
    energies that extends to 15 MeV. Super-K is
    sensitive to these rare but high energy Boron-8
    neutrinos.        Super-K detects Boron-8
    neutrinos when they scatter off of atomic
    electrons in the water. The recoil electron
    direction is oriented along the direction of
    neutrino travel (as in the banner at the top of
    this page). The electron makes a weak Cherenkov
    ring in the detector- only 40-50 PMT hits are
    expected for a 8 MeV electron (in a narrow time
    window, shown as bright green hits in this event
    display). At this low energy, there is
    considerable random background, mostly from radon
    gas in the water. So we count solar neutrinos by
    making an angular distribution with respect to
    the sun's known direction. This is shown if the
    figure below the sharp peak near cosine equals
    one is due to solar neutrinos. The area under the
    peak, after subtracting background, is the
    measured number of solar neutrinos.
  • http//hep.bu.edu/superk/solar.html

36
Did Kamioka See the Sun?
37
That bright thing in the sky!
38
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39
Kamioka
  • Brief History
  • Kamioka Underground Observatory, the predecessor
    of the present Kamioka Observatory, Institute for
    Cosmic Ray Reserch, University of Tokyo, was
    established in 1983. The original purpose of this
    observatory was to verify the Grand Unified
    Theories, one of the most impenetrable matters of
    elementary particle physics, through a Nucleon
    Decay Experiment. Thus, the water Cerenkov
    detector which was used for this experiment was
    named Kamiokande (KAMIOKA Nucleon Decay
    Experiment).
  • The 4,500 ton water Cerenkov detector was placed
    at 1,000 m underground of Mozumi Mine of the
    Kamioka Mining and Smelting Co. located in
    Kamioka-cho, Gifu, Japan. The original purpose of
    Kamiokande was to investigate the stability of
    matter, one of the most fundamental questions of
    elementary particle physics. An upgrade of
    Kamiokande was started in 1985 to observe
    particles called neutrino (Solar, Atmospheric and
    other neutrinos) which come from astrophysical
    sources and cosmic ray interactions. As a result
    of this upgrade, the detector had become highly
    sensitive. In February, 1987,Kamiokande had
    succeeded in detecting neutrinos from a supernova
    explosion which occurred in the Large Magellanic
    Cloud. Solar neutrinos were detected in 1988
    adding to the advancements in neutrino astronomy
    and neutrino astrophysics.
  • In 1996, Kamioka Observatory which belongs to the
    Institute for Cosmic Ray Research(ICRR),
    University of Tokyo was established. Kamiokande
    had been world famous for its achievements on the
    observation of supernova neutrinos, solar
    neutrinos and atmospheric neutrinos and also the
    study of the Grand Unified Theories of particles.
    In 1990, in order to make more progress int hese
    fields of research, construction was started on
    the 50,000 ton water Cerenkov detector,
    Super-Kamiokande (Super-KAMIOKA Nucleon Decay
    Experiment or Neutrino Detection Experiment).
    Super-Kamiokande is bigger and has greater
    photocathode coverage than Kamiokande.
    Construction was completed in 1995 and
    observation began in April of 1996.

40
Neutrino sources
  • Solar neutrinos From the process of
    thermonuclear fusion inside the stars (our sun or
    any other star in the universe).
  • Some other neutrinos could come from very
    cataclysmic phemomena like explosions of
    supernovae or neutron stars coalescences.
  • Neutrinos from nuclear reactors and accelerators
    These are high energy neutrinos produced by the
    particles accelerators and low energy neutrinos
    coming out of nuclear reactors. The first ones,
    whose energy can reach about 100 GeV, are
    produced to study the structure of the nucleons
    (protons and neutrons composing the atomic
    nuclei) and to study the weak interaction. The
    second ones are here although we did not ask for
    them. They are an abundant product made by the
    nuclear reactions inside the reactors cores (a
    standard nuclear plant radiate about 5x 1020
    neutrinos per second) and their energy is around
    4 MeV. Neutrinos from natural radioactivity on
    the earth The power coming from this natural
    radioactivity is estimated at about 20.000 Giga
    Watts (about 20.000 nuclear plants!) and the
    neutrinos coming from this radioactivity are
    numerous about 6 millions per second and per
    cm2. But those neutrinos, despite of their
    quantity, are often locally drowned in the oceans
    of neutrinos coming from the nuclear plants.
    Neutrinos from cosmic rays When a cosmic ray
    (proton coming from somewhere in space)
    penetrates the atmosphere, it interacts with an
    atomic nucleus and this generates a particles
    shower. They are called "atmospheric
    neutrinos".
  • Neutrinos from the Big-Bang The "standard"
    model of the Big-Bang predicts, like for the
    photons, a cosmic background of neutrinos. Those
    neutrinos, nobody has never seen them. They are
    yet very numerous about 330 neutrinos per cm3.
    But their energy is theoretically so little
    (about 0.0004 eV), that no experiment, even very
    huge, has been able to detect them.
    http//wwwlapp.in2p3.fr/neutrinos/ansources.html

41
Timeline
  • A NEUTRINO TIMELINE
  • The following is a short history of neutrinos as
    it relates to neutrino oscillation studies.
  • 1920-1927 Charles Drummond Ellis (along with
    James Chadwick and colleagues) establishes
    clearly that the beta decay spectrum is really
    continuous, ending all controversies.
  • 1930 Wolfgang Pauli hypothesizes the existence of
    neutrinos to account for the beta decay energy
    conservation crisis.
  • 1932 James Chadwick discovers the neutron.
  • 1933 Enrico Fermi writes down the correct theory
    for beta decay, incorporating the neutrino.
  • 1946 Shoichi Sakata and Takesi Inoue propose the
    pi-mu scheme with a neutrino to accompany muon.
  • 1956 Fred Reines and Clyde Cowan discover
    (electron anti-) neutrinos using a nuclear
    reactor.
  • 1957 Neutrinos found to be left handed by
    Goldhaber, Grodzins and Sunyar.
  • 1957 Bruno Pontecorvo proposes neutrino-antineutri
    no oscillations analogously to K0-K0bar, this is
    the first time neutrino oscillations (of some
    sort) are hypothesized.
  • 1962 Ziro Maki, Masami Nakagawa and Sakata
    introduce neutrino flavor mixing and flavor
    oscillations.
  • 1962 Muon neutrinos are discovered by Leon
    Lederman, Mel Schwartz, Jack Steinberger and
    colleagues at Brookhaven National Laboratories
    and it is confirmed that they are different from
    electron neutrinos.
  • 1964 John Bahcall and Ray Davis discuss the
    feasibility of measuring neutrinos from the sun.
  • 1965 The first natural neutrinos are observed by
    Reines and colleagues in a gold mine in South
    Africa, and by Goku Menon and colleagues in Kolar
    gold fields in India, setting first astrophysical
    limits.
  • 1968 Ray Davis and colleagues get first
    radiochemical solar neutrino results using
    cleaning fluid in the Homestake Mine in North
    Dakota, leading to the observed deficit now known
    as the "solar neutrino problem".
  • 1976 The tau lepton is discovered by Martin Perl
    and colleagues at SLAC in Stanford, California. 
    After several years, analysis of tau decay modes
    leads to the conclusion that tau is accompanied 
    by its own neutrino, nutau, which is neither nue
    nor numu.
  • 1980s The IMB, the first massive underground
    nucleon decay search instrument and neutrino
    detector is built in a 2000' deep Morton Salt
    mine near Cleveland, Ohio. The Kamioka experiment
    is built in a zinc mine in Japan.
  • 1985 The "atmospheric neutrino anomaly" is
    observed by IMB and Kamiokande.
  • 1986 Kamiokande group makes first directional
    counting observation solar of solar neutrinos and
    confirms deficit.

42
  • It appears established beyond reasonable doubt,
    through the success of the standard solar model,
    that the sun shines from nuclear fusion in its
    core. A fusion reaction involves the merging of
    two atomic nuclei into one. In the sun, a chain
    of several different fusion reactions along any
    of about four different pathways, leads from four
    hydrogen nuclei (single protons) to one helium
    nucleus (two protons and two neutrons). In this
    process, two protons have to be converted into
    neutrons through beta decays. In each beta decay,
    a neutrino is emitted (an electron-flavored
    neutrino, that is). So it is straightforward to
    calculate that, if the sun shines through
    hydrogen fusion, it ought to emit two neutrinos
    per fusion chain. And in our standard theory of
    particle physics, the neutrinos will zip straight
    out from the sun, without interacting with the
    intervening material. The total flux of neutrinos
    from the sun ought to be some 200 000 000 000 000
    000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 per second,
    corresponding to a flux of about 6.5 1010
    neutrinos per square centimeter per second
    hitting the earth.
  • Most of those neutrinos come from the main
    energy-producing reaction chain in the sun
    proton-proton fusion. Unfortunately, the
    neutrinos from proton-proton (pp) fusion have a
    very low energy. Energy in this context in
    measured in electron-volts (1 eV 1.6 10-19
    Joule), or millions of electron-volts (MeV), and
    the energy of the pp neutrinos is less than 0.42
    MeV, making them difficult to detect.
  • Smaller (but still enormous) numbers of
    higher-energy neutrinos are expected from various
    side reactions, notably boron and beryllium
    decays. There is also an alternative
    energy-producing chain, CNO-fusion, where the
    fusion of hydrogen to helium is catalyzed by
    carbon. This CNO-chain is expected to be the main
    energy source in larger, hotter stars, but it
    should only give a modest contribution in the
    sun. The CNO neutrinos are otherwise easier to
    detect than pp-neutrinos, having three to four
    times more energy each.
  • Number of interactions/person/lifetime from solar
    neutrinos 1.
  • http//www.talkorigins.org/faqs/faq-solar.html

43
  • Most physicists and astronomers believe that the
    sun's heat is produced by thermonuclear reactions
    that fuse light elements into heavier ones,
    thereby converting mass into energy. To
    demonstrate the truth of this hypothesis,
    however, is still not easy, nearly 50 years after
    it was suggested by Sir Arthur Eddington. The
    difficulty is that the sun's thermonuclear
    furnace is deep in the interior, where it is
    hidden by an enormous mass of cooler material.
    Hence conventional astronomical instruments, even
    when placed in orbit above the earth, can do no
    more than record the particles, chiefly photons,
    emitted by the outermost layers of the sun.
  • Of the particles released by the hypothetical
    thermonuclear reactions in the solar interior,
    only one species has the ability to penetrate
    from the center of the sun to the surface (a
    distance of some 400,000 miles) and escape into
    space the neutrino. This massless particle,
    which travels with the speed of light, is so
    unreactive that only one in every 100 billion
    created in the solar furnace is stopped or
    deflected on its flight to the sun's surface.
    Thus neutrinos offer us the possibility of
    seeing'' into the solar interior because they
    alone escape directly into space. About 3 percent
    of the total energy radiated by the sun is in the
    form of neutrinos. The flux of solar neutrinos at
    the earth's surface is on the order of 1011 per
    square centimeter per second. Unfortunately the
    fact that neutrinos escape so easily from the sun
    implies that they are difficult to capture.

44
  • Neutrinos were first suggested as hypothetical
    entities in 1931 after it was noted that small
    amounts of mass seemingly vanish in the
    radioactive decay of certain nuclei. Wolfgang
    Pauli suggested that the mass was spirited away
    in the form of energy by massless particles, for
    which Enrico Fermi proposed the name neutrino
    (little neutral one''). Fermi also provided a
    quantitative theory of processes involving
    neutrinos. In 1956 Frederick Reines and Clyde L.
    Cowan, Jr., succeeded in detecting neutrinos by
    installing an elaborate apparatus near a large
    nuclear reactor. Such a reactor emits a
    prodigious flux of antineutrinos produced by the
    radioactive decay of fission products. For
    purposes of demonstrating a particle's existence,
    of course, an antiparticle is as good as a
    particle.
  • In the late 1930's Hans A. Bethe of Cornell
    University followed up Eddington's 1920
    suggestion of the nuclear origin of the sun's
    energy and outlined how the fusion of atomic
    nuclei might enable the sun and other stars to
    shine for the billions of years required by the
    age of meteorites and terrestrial rocks. Since
    the 1930's the birth, evolution and death of
    stars have been widely studied. It is generally
    assumed that the original main constituent of the
    universe was hydrogen. Under certain conditions
    hydrogen atoms presumably assemble into clouds,
    or protostars, dense enough to contract by their
    own gravitational force. The contraction
    continues until the pressure and temperature at
    the center of the protostar ignite thermonuclear
    reactions in which hydrogen nuclei combine to
    form helium nuclei. After most of the hydrogen
    has been consumed, the star contracts again
    gravitationally until its center becomes hot
    enough to fuse helium nuclei into still heavier
    elements. The process of fuel exhaustion and
    contraction continues through a number of cycles.
  • The sun is thought to be in the first stage of
    nuclear burning. In this stage four hydrogen
    nuclei (protons) are fused to create a helium
    nucleus, consisting of two protons and two
    neutrons. In the process two positive charges
    (originally carried by two of the four protons)
    emerge as two positive electrons (antiparticles
    of the familiar electron). The fusion also
    releases two neutrinos and some excess energy,
    about 25 million electron volts (MeV). This
    energy corresponds to the amount of mass lost in
    the overall reaction, which is to say that a
    helium nucleus and two electrons weigh slightly
    less than four protons. The 25 MeV of energy so
    released appears as energy of motion in the gas
    of the solar furnace and as photons (particles of
    radiant energy). This energy ultimately diffuses
    to the surface of the sun and escapes in the form
    of sunlight and other radiation.
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