Brazilian Physics Drives Progress in International Research on Neutrinos
Hello
reader!
It
follows an article published today (05/15) in the english website of the Agência
FAPESP noting that Brazilian Physics drives progress in international research
on Neutrinos.
Duda
Falcão
NEWS
Brazilian
Physics Drives Progress in
International Research on Neutrinos
By
Diego Freire
May 15,
2015
(Photo: Claudio Arouca/FAPESP)
International cooperation is helping to increase our
knowledge
of particles that may account for the asymmetry between
matter and
antimatter in the universe.
|
Agência FAPESP – Brazil will produce some of the enhancements
that are set to make international research on neutrinos advance considerably
in the years ahead. The statement was made by Robert Svoboda, Professor of
Physics at the University of California, Davis, during FAPESP Week UC Davis in Brazil, hosted
by FAPESP and UC Davis in São Paulo on May 12-13, 2015.
Svoboda is one of the spokespersons for the Deep
Underground Neutrino Experiment (DUNE), the world’s largest experiment devoted
to detecting and studying neutrino interactions.
“Neutrinos are the smallest known particles. It would
take ten million neutrinos to make an electron, which means that for every atom
there are at least 1 billion neutrinos. In other words, we’re visitors in the
neutrino universe, which in itself is a very good reason to try to understand
them. Brazil has a major share in the knowledge obtained to date about these
particles, and Brazilians are working on important new contributions,” Svoboda
told Agência FAPESP.
He was referring to the participation of five
Brazilian institutions in the international collaboration responsible for DUNE.
Researchers affiliated with the University of Campinas (UNICAMP), the Federal
University of ABC (UFABC), the Federal University of Goiás (UFG), the Federal
University of Alagoas (UFAL) and the University of Southwest Bahia (UESB) are
working to upgrade the sensors for the experiment, located in the United
States.
The world’s most powerful instrument for studying the
elusive neutrino spans more than 1,200 km between the Fermi National
Accelerator Laboratory (Fermilab) in Illinois and the Sanford Underground
Research Facility in South Dakota.
The distance between the neutrino detectors installed
at either extremity will enable the international physics community to study
the changes undergone by neutrinos as they pass through the earth’s mantle.
“We’re currently working on development of the
experiment’s photon detection system, using acrylic fiber doped with a chemical
compound that shifts the light produced by neutrino interaction to the visible
spectrum so that the experiment’s sensors can see the interaction with greater
precision,” explained Ernesto Kemp from UNICAMP’s Cosmic Rays & Chronology
Department. Kemp was another speaker at FAPESP Week.
“New techniques are also being researched and
developed to improve light reflection and collection in the experiment, so that
the light travels to the fiber and from there to the light sensors more
efficiently, as well as numerical simulations to validate these enhancements
and new sensitivity calculations,” Kemp said.
For Kemp, the capabilities of its community of
experimental physicists have positioned Brazil as an important collaborator in
international research on neutrinos.
“The precision we pursue in measuring neutrino
oscillation parameters, which depend on the energy generated and the matter
they pass through, among other factors, will enhance our ability to understand
how these particles can have been responsible for the predominance of matter in
the universe instead of antimatter, for example,” he said.
Matter Versus Antimatter
Until the 1990s physicists believed neutrinos had no
mass. According to Svoboda, the discovery of evidence to the contrary and a
better understanding of the neutrino’s behavior may explain why the universe is
made up predominantly of matter, whereas antimatter was just as likely to
emerge from the Big Bang but is now practically nonexistent.
“When the universe was formed, matter and antimatter
existed symmetrically in equal amounts. The increase in the amount of matter
that took place after the Big Bang and accounts for things as we know them may
have been caused by neutrinos,” Kemp said.
The answer appears to lie in the strange behavior of
the neutrino’s mass and its relationship with its antiparticle. Scientists know
the neutrino’s mass can change spontaneously and neutrinos can oscillate among
the three available species or “flavors”.
“These properties aren’t well understood, but they may
have distorted the balance of matter and antimatter produced at the beginning
of the universe,” Svoboda said.
Cooperation
Besides DUNE, Brazil is participating in other
important international experiments designed to investigate the behavior of
neutrinos. Svoboda and Kemp are collaborating in Double Chooz, an experiment
that aims to measure neutrino oscillation by observing antineutrinos produced
in a nuclear reactor at Chooz, France. Brazil’s participation, which was
supported by FAPESP under the aegis of the project “Measurements
of neutrinos at nuclear reactors”, coordinated by
UFABC’s Pietro Chimenti, led to the development of electronic sensors used to
measure the energy of cosmic muons as they pass through the detector.
Based on the results of this and other experiments
around the world, scientists now know the difference in mass between neutrino
flavors but not how much mass each one has. This question remains unanswered,
along with many others, but in Svoboda’s view international cooperation has
contributed to significant progress.
“These particles went from theory to experimental
proof in a very short time,” he said. “The first natural occurrence of
neutrinos was observed in the 1960s in a South Africa mine. Neutrino-muon
oscillations indicating that they have mass were detected in the 1990s at the
Super-Kamiokande neutrino observatory in Japan. We must step up our efforts
still further to keep the field advancing and find the answers mankind is
seeking to the question of why things are as they are,” he said.
Source: English WebSite of the Agência FAPESP
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