Questions tagged [neutrinos]

Neutrinos are light, uncharged leptons. The neutrino tag should be applied to question relating to neutrino properties or interactions involving neutrinos.

Neutrinos are light, uncharged leptons. The neutrino tag should be applied to question relating to neutrino properties or interactions involving neutrinos.

Neutrinos are produced in nuclear reaction involving the weak force. Sources that are useful for experimental efforts include the sun (matter type, electron flavored neutrinos), nuclear fission reactors (anti-matter type, electron flavored neutrinos), the interactions of cosmic rays with the atmosphere and the interactions of man-made particle beams with matter (both matter and anti-matter, and all flavors)

Having neither charge nor color, neutrinos interact only by way of gravity and the weak nuclear force. Both of these forces are, well, weak and the neutrinos have relatively low cross-section for interactions with ordinary matter.

Flavor?

Both the charged and the un-charged leptons come in three type which seem to be identical except for mass. The charged leptons are the electron, the muon, and the tau-lepton (often just called "a tau"). For each of these there is a corresponding neutrino, but see the section on mixing below.

Brief History

A light uncharged particle was first proposed in 1930 by Wolfgang Pauli to solve the problem of the beta decay spectrum. Pauli called his particle a "neutron", but that name was later adopted for the uncharged nucleon. The name "neutrino" (meaning "little neutral one") was coined by Enrico Fermi in 1934. Neutrinos were originally modeled as massless for simplicity and in the absence of any measurable mass the assumption was adopted as a given. Neutrinos (actually anti-neutrinos) from a fission reactor were first detected experimentally in 1956 by Cowan and Reines using a delay coincidence technique that remains the standard for reactor neutrinos to this day.

Starting in 1970 Raymond Davis Jr., Kenneth C. Hoffman and Don S. Harmer tried to measure the solar neutrino flux using a large tank full of cleaning fluid placed deep in the Homestake mine in South Dakota. They got a figure too low to match theories of stellar structure. This mis-match persisted for two decades, and required a change of theory to resolve: the neutrinos must be considered as massive (albeit light) and allowed to mix.

Experiments at Sudbury Canada, the Kamioka mine facility in Japan, various nuclear reactor complexes, and at several accelerator sites around the world would eventually show clear evidence of neutrino mixing.

Current efforts are focused on determining the parameters of the mixing matrix (two mass differences and all three mixing angles are known), searching for evidence of CP violation in the neutrino sector, and determining if the neutrinos are Dirac or Majorana particles.

Mixing

Mixing occurs because the flavor states of the neutrinos, written $\nu_e, \nu_\mu, \nu_\tau$ are not eigenstates of the free Hamiltonian. Those are called the "mass states" and are written $\nu_1, \nu_2, \nu_3$. In a mixing experiment, (anit-)neutrinos are produced in one location (production occurs in flavor state) and allowed to propagate to another location where they are detected (again, detection is of flavor states). During the time the neutrinos travel, they are acted upon by the free Hamiltonian which does not keep pure flavor state pure---that is, it mixes them. The result is that the distribution of flavor states detected may not match the distribution of flavor states created.

Mixing was actually proposed by Gribov and Pontecorvo in 1968 (even before the Homestake experiment). [Phys. Lett, 28B, vol. 7, p. 493]

Open Questions

  • Measure the remaining parameter of the mixing ($\delta_{CP}$) and refine the values of the known parameters.
  • Does neutrino mixing violate CP (i.e. is $\delta_{CP} \ne 0$?)
  • Mass hierarchy problem.
  • Dirac of Majorana nature?
  • Are there additional neutrinos states (either heavy weakly interacting neutrinos or sterile neutrinos)?
  • What is up with the new result from OPERA? Do they really go faster than light? This appears to be solved, and Einstein is still right.
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Why did the Homestake experiment only detect solar neutrinos?

The Homestake experiment was designed to detect solar neutrinos. In order to shield it from the background, it was set up in a deep underground mine. It was found that the only one third of expected neutrinos were detected, leading to the solar…
Whelp
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Do cosmological neutrino-antineutrino pairs annihilate at all?

Do low energy cosmological/relic neutrino-antineutrino pairs annihilate to produce photons at all? Their energy is presently too low to produce electron-positron pairs but there should be an indirect, suppressed path to produce photons. Is there an…
Mongrav
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Experiments to find right handed neutrinos

I have read this in the wiki article about neutrino oscillation. The question of how neutrino masses arise has not been answered conclusively. In the Standard Model of particle physics, fermions only have mass because of interactions with the Higgs…
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How do they know which flavor was the neutrino if it collapses into an electron or electron-neutrino?

I read an article that talked about how oscillation of neutrinos worked. It caught my attention that the author of the article mentioned that when a neutrino is measured (by the interaction with nucleus) in a neutrino telescope, independently of…
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Do neutrinos have a half-life?

I know that neutrons are stable within the nucleus of an atom but free neutrons have a half-life. I couldn't find any information on neutrino half-lives. Do neutrinos have a half-life? Since neutrinos are rarely measurable, do we have enough…
CJ Dennis
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Why is the baseline of solar neutrinos is reported as "only" 10^10 meters while distance Sun-Earth is 1.5e11 meters?

Solar neutrinos correspond to neutrinos produced by the sun, and travelling until Earth. The distance Earth-Sun is 150 millions km, which is 1.5e8 times 1e3 = 1.5e11 meters. So why the "baseline" (=distance of flight) of the solar neutrinos be…
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Neutrino appearance and disappearance experiments

Why in neutrinos appearance experiments the background is said to be small? and how is it connected to the mixing angles? Why is it opposite in the neutrino disappearance experiments?
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Is it possible to create a neutrino data channel?

With neutrinos capable of traveling directly through Earth, is it possible to encode information on one end and decode on another, potentially creating the fastest data link between, say London and New York? We have a neutrino telescope close to our…
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Role of the ratio L/E in neutrino experiments

Why is it that the neutrino experiments are designed by keeping constraints on the energy E of the neutrinos and the length L which they travel from the source to the detector. What decides actually the ratio $L/E$ for a neutrino experiment? To be…
Seeker
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How does heavy water detect all 3 flavors of neutrinos?

According to my understanding, scientists in Sudbury Canada and Japan were confused for a while on why they were getting only 1/3 of the expected neutrino capture from the sun. They then theorized that they were set up to only detect the electron…
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Solar neutrino momentum flux through Earth

According to wikipedia, the sun emits enough neutrinos that the number passing through a square meter of area oriented perpendicular to the sun at Earth distance is around $6.5 \times 10^{14}$ per second. What is the momentum flux of these…
Craig Gidney
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What is the KE of a neutrino?

It is usually said that neutrinos travel at near c, I suppose there is no precise measurement, but is it known what is the approximate value of its KE? Also, the mass of a neutrino is 5 million times smaller than an electron, it is already difficult…
user337596
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With a given fixed flavor neutrino produced, after a long flight, will the measured flavor always be the same at the detector?

In theories explaining neutrino oscillations (with 3 neutrinos to make it simple), it is explained that a neutrino flavor eigenstate that is produced with an electroweak process is actually a superposition of various neutrinos mass…
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How could the baseline of atmospheric neutrinos be as much as $10^7$ meters while exosphere (outer part of atmosphere) is at most 8e5 meters?

Atmospheric neutrinos correspond to neutrinos produced by the interaction of cosmic rays in the Earth atmosphere. The Earth atmosphere is at most $800$ km=$8 \cdot 10^5$ meters. So how could the "baseline" (=distance of flight) of the atmospheric…
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Neutrinos and the human body

With such a high number of neutrinos passing through everything all the time, and only rarely colliding with another particle, what is the likelihood of one colliding with a particle while passing through a human body in an average lifetime?
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