Science Current Events | Science News | Brightsurf.com
 
Email a Friend Send to a friend
Printer Friendly Print Catching Some Rays
Slashdot It! Slashdot Catching Some Rays
Submit to Reddit Submit Catching Some Rays to Reddit
Reading: Catching Some RaysTwitter This Reading: Catching Some RaysTwitter Catching Some Rays
Add to Facebook Add Catching Some Rays to Facebook

Catching Some Rays

August 22, 2007

An international team of researchers has detected low-energy solar neutrinos--subatomic particles produced in the core of the sun--and measured in real-time the rate the particles hit our planet.

The researchers also obtained fresh evidence that neutrinos oscillate (transform from one state to another) before arriving at Earth, adding weight to present theories about the nature of neutrinos and the inner workings of the sun and other stars.




The team of more than 100 researchers, including National Science Foundation (NSF)-supported investigators at Princeton University and Virginia Tech, have operated the so-called Borexino experiment in one of the deepest laboratories in the world, the Gran Sasso Laboratory of the Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare (INFN, the Italian National Institute of Nuclear Physics), near the town of L'Aquila, Italy.

These are the first results from the Borexino experiment that has been under construction since the late 1990s with the support of INFN as the lead agency, NSF in the United States, and institutions in Germany, France and Russia.

"In making these first direct measurements of low-energy neutrinos coming from the sun, Borexino represents a convergence of our present understanding of neutrino properties and the physics of solar energy generation," said Brad Keister, program director for nuclear physics in NSF's mathematical and physical sciences directorate.

"The great depth of the laboratory and the incredible purity of the materials used in the detection were critical to the discovery and demonstrated the impact of eliminating background radiation from such experiments," added Keister.

Produced in the Big Bang, and more recently in stars and nuclear reactors, neutrinos are everywhere. They constantly bombard the Earth, but because they interact very weakly, chances are slim a neutrino will hit anything. More than 100,000,000,000,000 pass through each of us every second without our noticing them.

The 18-meter (59-foot) diameter Borexino detector lies more than a kilometer (almost a mile) underground in one of the planet's deepest laboratories. The depth blocks out cosmic rays and other radiation sources that could create additional background signals.

The detector is comprised mainly of concentric layers of radiation shielding. Within an external tank filled with 2,400 tons of water, an enormous stainless steel sphere lies anchored. Within the sphere are two nested nylon vessels, each containing successively purer detector fluids.

Neutrinos knock electrons out of atoms in the detector fluid, and in turn, the electrons generate photons as they travel further through the liquid environment.

Attached to the inside of the stainless steel sphere and facing inward is a suite of photomultipliers, 2,200 glass bulbs that look somewhat like floodlamps. Instead of creating light, each is capable of detecting the individual photons.

Because radioactive decay in stray uranium, thorium or other elements can produce photons, even impurities in the materials of the detector itself could generate false signals. To counter this, the researchers developed techniques to achieve an unprecedented level of purity for the fluids and all materials in the experiment.

"The Borexino team made a major leap forward in the field of low-radiation background measurements, reaching far lower background radiation than ever before," said Frank Calaprice, the principle investigator of the Princeton University team. "The first part of the strategy was to use a simple detection liquid that could be purified by standard methods such as distillation. The second component was to house the liquid in a clean, low-background containment vessel."

The Borexino experiment measures the flux of neutrinos passing through the detector, and this rate is critical for confirming theories for how neutrinos oscillate.

Researchers have long known that neutrinos were generated by fusion reactions in the sun's core, but the model predicted more neutrinos than had been seen.

Physicists later realized that the explanation might lie in a new understanding of neutrinos, rather than a revised understanding of the reactions in the sun's core.

In recent years, physicists have theorized that neutrinos produced in the sun transform back and forth, or oscillate, into other "flavors" of neutrinos. Earlier measurements of higher-energy neutrinos have shown that the solar models appear to be correct, but due to oscillations, only a fraction of the neutrinos with the original flavor is detected.

"We've learned a lot from higher energy neutrinos in recent years," said Keister. "But the issue has remained that we haven't looked directly at the energies where most of the neutrinos have been produced."

Now, the Borexino measurement of low-energy neutrinos confirms this picture, including the expected neutrino deficit.

"This eagerly awaited physics result is an excellent example of an international collaboration to undertake an extremely challenging measurement," said Bruce Vogelaar, the principal investigator of the Virginia Tech team. "The Borexino detector will now move into a precision measurement phase and we will be able to uniquely probe some of the most important fundamental properties of neutrinos and our sun."

The study has so far involved 100 professionals, including physicists, engineers, and technicians, and included INFN sections at the Universities of Milan, Genoa, and Perugia and the laboratories of Gran Sasso; Princeton University and Virginia Tech in the United States; the Technische Universität of Munich; the Max Planck Institute of Heidelberg; the French Laboratory for Astroparticle Physics and Cosmology; the Jagellonian University of Krakow; the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research in Dubna; and the Kurchatov Institute of Moscow.

The research preprint is now available online at the arXiv server, a leading pre-publication posting site for physics discoveries.

Additional information on the experiment, the results and the facility is available on the INFN website.

The National Science Foundation





Science News and Science Current Events Tag Cloud
This tag cloud is a visual representation of term frequencies of random science news topics with common terms grouped together and emphasized by their display size.
Racial discrimination   Neurological Disease   Neuroscience   Ultraviolet Radiation   Folic Acid   Radiation Therapy   Pediatric   Risky Behavior   Bacteria   Copd   Influenza Pandemic   Thyroid   Monsoon   Astrocytes   Quasar   Genomes   Cleft Palate   Shark Attack   Body Fat   Cardiovascular Disease   Colonoscopy   Collagen   Frogs   Vitamin B12   Gamma-ray Bursts  
Related Neutrinos Current Events and Neutrinos News Articles Neutrinos Current Events and Neutrinos News RSS Neutrinos Current Events and Neutrinos News RSS
Precision measurement of W boson mass portends stricter limits for Higgs particle
Scientists of the DZero collaboration at the Department of Energy's Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory have achieved the world's most precise measurement of the mass of the W boson by a single experiment. Combined with other measurements, the reduced uncertainty of the W boson mass will lead to stricter bounds on the mass of the elusive Higgs boson.

Cosmic rays detected deep underground reveal secrets of the upper atmosphere
Cosmic-rays detected half a mile underground in a disused U.S. iron-mine can be used to detect major weather events occurring 20 miles up in the Earth's upper atmosphere, a new study has revealed.

UD researchers focus on building telescope at South Pole
It's 40 degrees F below zero (with the wind chill) at the South Pole today. Yet a research team from the University of Delaware is taking it all in stride.

Einstein's relativity survives neutrino test
Physicists working to disprove "Lorentz invariance" -- Einstein's prediction that matter and massless particles will behave the same no matter how they're turned or how fast they go -- won't get that satisfaction from muon neutrinos, at least for the time being, says a consortium of scientists.

Crystal bells stay silent as physicists look for dark matter
Scientists of the Cryogenic Dark Matter Search experiment today announced that they have regained the lead in the worldwide race to find the particles that make up dark matter. The CDMS experiment, conducted a half-mile underground in a mine in Soudan, Minn., again sets the world's best constraints on the properties of dark matter candidates.

Were the first stars dark?
Perhaps the first stars in the newborn universe did not shine, but instead were invisible "dark stars" 400 to 200,000 times wider than the sun and powered by the annihilation of mysterious dark matter, a University of Utah study concludes

Scientists discover possible cosmic defect, remnant from Big Bang
Scientists from the Institute of Physics of Cantabria (IFCA) and the University of Cambridge may have discovered an example of a cosmic defect, a remnant from the Big Bang called a texture.

Dwarf galaxies need dark matter too, U-M astronomers say
Stars in dwarf spheroidal galaxies behave in a way that suggests the galaxies are utterly dominated by dark matter, University of Michigan astronomers have found.

Researchers detect low-energy neutrinos, probe energy production in sun's center
In collaboration with scientists from institutions in the United States and Europe, researchers from Virginia Tech have observed tell-tale signals of neutrinos emitted by thermonuclear fusion reactions that power the sun deep in its interior.

Princeton scientists confirm long-held theory about source of sunshine
Scientists are a step closer to understanding sunshine. A monumental experiment buried deep beneath the mountains of Italy has provided Princeton physicists with a clearer understanding of the sun's heart -- and of a mysterious class of subatomic particles born there.
More Neutrinos Current Events and Neutrinos News Articles
Fundamentals of Neutrino Physics and Astrophysics

Fundamentals of Neutrino Physics and Astrophysics
by Carlo Giunti (Author), Chung W. Kim (Author)

This book deals with neutrino physics and astrophysics- a field in which some of the most exciting recent developments in particle physics, astrophysics and cosmology took place. The book is the most up-to-date, comprehensive and self-contained treatment of key issues in neutrino physics. It discusses all the topics vital to the understanding of the nature of neutrinos such as what they are, how to describe them, how they behave in nature, and the roles of neutrinos play in shaping our Universe. The book provides comprehensive discussions, both experimental and theoretical, with relevant mathematical details, on neutrino oscillations, extra-terrestrial as well as terrestrial neutrinos and relic neutrinos. It also discusses many implications of current experimental data on rector,...

OCZ Neutrino OCZDIY10N1-US 10.1-Inch DIY Netbook

OCZ Neutrino OCZDIY10N1-US 10.1-Inch DIY Netbook
by OCZ Technology

Based on the Intel Atom processor, the 10.1 Inches Neutrino was developed to push the envelope in the growing area of netbooks as the first DIY offering. Proving that good things come in small packages, the Neutrino provides all the day-to-day file viewing and web-surfing needs for on-the-go traveling, education, office or home use. Equipped with a built-in camera and microphone, Neutrino will expand your horizons through communications between family, friends, and colleague, infinite possibilities.Though many companies offer customization and different configurations, nothing compares to the options available to you with a DIY notebook kit. When the components and features are selected by you and it's built by you, it's more like you.

Physics of Neutrinos: and Applications to Astrophysics

Physics of Neutrinos: and Applications to Astrophysics
by Springer

This book provides a survey of the current state of research into the physics of neutrinos. It is presented in a pedagogical form accessible to non-specialists and graduate students, but will also be useful as a handbook for researchers in this field. The reader finds here a global view of the areas of physics in which neutrinos play important roles, including astrophysics and cosmology. The book is intended to be self-contained: Starting from the standard theory of electroweak interactions, the key notions are explained in detail and the fundamental equations are derived explicitly, so that readers can understand their precise content and implications. Prime emphasis is given to models of massive neutrinos and to the magnetic moment of the neutrino. The first eight chapters deal mostly...

Neutrino Oscillations: Present Status and Future Plans

Neutrino Oscillations: Present Status and Future Plans
by Jennifer A. Thomas (Author), Patricia L Vahl (Author), Jennifer A. Thomas (Editor), Patricia L. Vahle (Editor)

This book reviews the status of a very exciting field -- neutrino oscillations -- at a very important time. The fact that neutrinos have mass has only been proved in the last few years and the acceptance of that fact has opened up a whole new area of study to understand the fundamental parameters of the mixing matrix.

The book summarizes the results from all the experiments which have played a role in the measurement of neutrino oscillations and briefly describes the scope of some new planned experiments. Contributions include a theoretical introduction by Stephen Parke from FNAL, as well as articles from all the major experimental groups who have been pivotal in uncovering the nature of the neutrino mass.

Contents: Neutrino Oscillation Phenomenology (S J Parke); The...

  Motion Picture Soundtrack
by Neutrino



Physics of Neutrinos

Physics of Neutrinos
by Masataka Fukugita (Author), Tsutomu Yanagida (Author)

This book provides a survey of the current state of research into the physics of neutrinos. It is presented in a pedagogical form accessible to non-specialists and graduate students, but will also be useful as a handbook for researchers in this field. The reader finds here a global view of the areas of physics in which neutrinos play important roles, including astrophysics and cosmology. The book is intended to be self-contained: Starting from the standard theory of electroweak interactions, the key notions are explained in detail and the fundamental equations are derived explicitly, so that readers can understand their precise content and implications. Prime emphasis is given to models of massive neutrinos and to the magnetic moment of the neutrino. The first eight chapters deal mostly...

Reload (feat. Neutrino)

Reload (feat. Neutrino)
by Eastside Records



Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Zak The Neutrino

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Zak The Neutrino
by Playmates

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Zak The Neutrino

OCZ Neutrino 10 inch Netbook Exterior Air Cushion Netbook Sleeve

OCZ Neutrino 10 inch Netbook Exterior Air Cushion Netbook Sleeve
by AC

The Exterior Air Cushion Netbook Sleeve for Netbook provides strong protection from exterior shock or impact. This pouch features premium quality shock absorbing Air Cushions to provide extra protection and extra mesh pocket for small accessories or file documents. Perfect for business, school, traveling, etc. Don't get caught without a trustworthy protection!

Neutrino Rack Pack - Set of 6 by Black Diamond

Neutrino Rack Pack - Set of 6 by Black Diamond
by Black Diamond

165201 Features: For the weight-saving climber: despite their strength, Neutrino carabiners are ultralight to only 36 grams Use in wet and cold conditions, wiregates are less prone to freezing up Set of 6 Specifications: Weight: 36 grams Type: wiregate Gate closed strength: 24 kN Gate open strength: 8 kN Minor axis strength: 7 kN Locking: no

© 2009 BrightSurf.com