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Neutrino
Neutrino
The neutrino is an elementary particle. It
has spin 1/2 and so it is a
fermion. Its mass is very small, though recent experiments (see
Super-Kamiokande) have shown it to be different from zero. It only interacts
through the
weak interaction and feels neither the
strong nor the
electromagnetic interaction(but it feels
gravity, since it has a mass, but since it is extremely small, when gravity
is already the weakest force, it hardly matters).
Because the neutrino only interacts weakly, when moving
through ordinary matter its chance of interacting with it is very small. It
would take a
light year of
lead
to block half the neutrinos flowing through it. Neutrino detectors therefore
typically contain hundreds of tons of a material constructed so that a few atoms
per day would interact with the incoming neutrinos. In collapsing supernova, the
densities at the core become high enough (1014 grams / cc) that the
produced neutrinos can be detected.
There are three different kinds, or
flavors, of neutrinos: the electron neutrino νe, the muon
neutrino νμ and the tau neutrino ντ, named after their
partner
lepton in the
Standard Model.
The neutrino was first postulated by
Wolfgang Pauli to explain the continuous spectrum of the
beta decay.
Massive neutrinos can oscillate between the three flavors, in
a phenomenon known as
neutrino oscillation (which provides a solution to the
solar neutrino problem and the
atmospheric neutrino problem at the same time).
Most of the energy of a collapsing
supernova is radiated away on the form of neutrinos which are produced when
protons and
electrons in the core combine to form
neutrons. This produces an inmense burst of neutrinos. The first
experimental evidence came in the year 1987,
when neutrinos coming from the
supernova 1987a were detected.
Some years ago it was believed that massive neutrinos could
account for the
dark matter, though with the current knowledge of neutrino masses they don't
contribute a significant fraction to it. Cosmological observations provide
themselves limits on the properties of the neutrino.
There are several types of neutrino detectors. Each type
consists of a large amount of material in an underground cave designed to shield
it from
cosmic radiation.
-
Chlorine detectors were the first used and consist of a
tank filled with
dry cleaning fluid. In these detectors a neutrino would convert a
chlorine atom into one of
argon. The fluid would periodically be purged with
helium gas which would remove the argon. The helium would then be cooled
to separate out the argon. These detectors had the failing that it was
impossible to determine the direction of the incoming neutron. It was the
chlorine detector in Homestake, South Dakota, containing 520 tons of fluid,
which first detected the deficit of neutrinos from the sun that led to the
solar neutrino problem. This type of detector is only sensitive to νe.
-
Gallium detectors are similar to chlorine detectors but more sensitive to
low-energy neutrinos. A neutrino would convert gallium to
germanium which could then be chemically detected. Again, this type of
detector provides no information on the direction of the neutrino.
-
Pure water detectors such as
Super-Kamiokande contain a large area of pure water surrounded by
sensitive light detectors known as
photomultiplier tubes. In this detector, the neutrino transfers its energy
to an electron which then travels faster than the speed of light in the medium
(though slower than the speed of light in a vacuum). This generates an
"optical shockwave" known as
Cherenkov radiation which can be detected by the photomultiplier tubes.
This detector has the advantage that the neutrino is recorded as soon as it
enters the detector, and information about the direction of the neutrino can
be gathered. It was this type of detector that recorded the neutrino burst
from
Supernova 1987a. This type of detector is sensitive to νe and νμ.
-
Heavy water detectors use three types of reactions to detect the neutrino.
The first is the same reaction as pure water detectors. The second involves
the neutrino striking the
deuterium atom releasing an electron. The third involves the neutrino
breaking the deuterium atom into two. The results of these reactions can be
detected by
photomultiplier tubes. This type of detector is in operation in the
Sudbury Neutrino Observatory. This type of detector is sensitive to all
three neutrino flavors.
See also
particle physics.
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