Study of Neutrinos Helps Explain Origin of Material Universe
Hello
reader!
It
follows an article published on day (12/14) in the english website of the Agência
FAPESP noting that Study of Neutrinos helps explain origin of material universe.
Duda Falcão
NEWS
Study of Neutrinos Helps Explain
Origin of Material Universe
By José Tadeu Arantes
Agência FAPESP
December
14, 2016
Photo of
Double Chooz inner detector / CEA-Saclay / IRFU-SIS
An
ongoing experiment in France has precisely measured
a key parameter of neutrino
oscillation associated with
matter-antimatter asymmetry
|
An experiment
designed to measure neutrino oscillation has produced knowledge that is of
crucial importance to an understanding of the phenomenon that led to the
emergence of the material universe. Referred to by particle physicists as
charge-parity symmetry violation (a difference between the behaviors of particles
and their antiparticles), the phenomenon produced a small surplus of matter
over antimatter shortly after the Big Bang. Without this matter-antimatter
imbalance, the known universe could not exist.
The
experiment, called Double Chooz, is still under way in France as an
international collaboration in which Brazil is participating. Pietro Chimenti,
an Italian physicist who lives in Brazil, contributed to the collaboration with
the project “Bayesian analysis of Theta_13 in the Double-Chooz experiment”, supported by FAPESP.
“Some 40
million euros have been invested in Double Chooz,” Chimenti told Agência
FAPESP. “If you spend that amount to obtain a measurement, you’ll want to
be sure the measurement is performed with great care, which means double- and
triple-checking all the calculations using different methods in order to rule
out any possible sources of error. My analysis using the Bayesian method
confirmed the data obtained through more conventional techniques. That’s highly
positive.”
Chimenti is an
associate professor at the University of Londrina (UEL) in Paraná State,
Brazil, and was formerly a researcher at the Federal University of the ABC
(UFABC) in São Paulo State.
There are
three types, or “flavors,” of neutrino: the electron neutrino, the muon
neutrino and the tau neutrino. Scientists have discovered that neutrinos can
switch flavor through a process called neutrino oscillation. “This is a
probabilistic phenomenon that occurs during the propagation of neutrinos
through space,” Chimenti explained.
The Double
Chooz experiment measures neutrino oscillation by comparing the neutrino fluxes
and spectra in two identical detectors at different distances (400 m and 1,050
m) from the reactor cores of the Chooz nuclear power plant in the Ardennes,
near the French border with Belgium.
The difference
in the quantities of neutrinos detected is used to calculate the oscillation,
that is, the transformation of one flavor of neutrino into another. Above all,
Double Chooz aims to achieve an even more precise measurement of theta
one-three (θ13), one of the mixing angles that describe this
oscillation.
Precise
measurement of θ13 was chosen as the goal for the experiment because
of the vital information it provides about the intrinsic nature of neutrinos
and because of its connection with charge-parity violation, the phenomenon
believed to have produced the surplus of matter that constitutes the universe.
“If θ13
were zero, it would be impossible to measure CP violation in oscillations.
Double Chooz has shown that its value is not zero, so future experiments will
be able to measure CP violation. These next-generation experiments are necessary
because the asymmetry could be null even with a non-zero θ13,”
Chimenti said. His confirmation of conventional measurements via the Bayesian
method was applauded by his peers.
“Bayesian
analysis has rarely been used as a statistical method in high-energy physics
because it requires a computational capacity that barely existed until 20 years
ago. Now, very powerful computers operating at low cost have enabled more
frequent use of the technique. The results I achieved are perfectly compatible
with those already obtained by the Double Chooz collaboration using different
techniques. We said the same things in different words, as it were,” Chimenti
said.
In speaking of
next-generation experiments, Chimenti refers specifically to the Deep Underground Neutrino
Experiment (DUNE), a billion-dollar international mega-science project
designed to discover new properties of neutrinos.
DUNE’s first
stage is scheduled to go live in 2018, followed by stage two in 2021. The
project calls for the construction of an underground source emitting the
world’s most intense neutrino beam at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory
(Fermilab) in Batavia, Illinois, in the United States.
The neutrinos
created by the underground beamline will be intercepted by two detectors: one
600 m underground at Fermilab, and a larger detector 1.47 km below the surface
at the Sanford Underground Research Facility in Lead, South Dakota, 1,300 km
away from their source.
Brazil is also
participating in DUNE, with contributions from researchers at the University of
Campinas (UNICAMP), UFABC, the Brazilian Physics Research Center (CBPF), the
Federal University of Goiás (UFG), the Federal University of Alfenas (UNIFAL)
at Poços de Caldas, and the University of Feira de Santana (UEFS). FAPESP is
providing support through the Thematic Project “Challenges in the XXI century in Physics and Astrophysics of
neutrinos”, with Orlando Luís Goulart Peres as principal investigator,
and through Young Researcher Grants for the “Liquid Argon Program at UNICAMP”, led by Ettore
Segreto.
Unique Properties
Neutrinos are
the second most abundant particles in the universe, behind only photons.
Because they have no electric charge and do not participate in electromagnetic
interactions or the strong nuclear interaction, they can pass through ordinary
matter and even compact bodies without hindrance and without being noticed by
human beings. These properties give them a unique role in physics. Until the
end of the 1990s, they were believed to have no mass, but experiments performed
at Japan’s Super-Kamiokande and Canada’s Sudbury Neutrino Observatory (SNO)
showed they do indeed have mass, albeit very small. This discovery led to the
awarding of the 2015 Nobel Prize in Physics to Japanese physicist Takaaki
Kajita and Canadian astrophysicist Arthur McDonald (read more on the subject
in Portuguese at agencia.fapesp.br/22019).
In the
Standard Model of particle physics, the neutrino is part of the lepton family.
One type of neutrino corresponds to each electrically charged lepton (electron,
muon and tau). The experiments performed at Super-Kamiokande and SNO
demonstrated the neutrino’s strange ability to transform among the three
flavors. This is possible only if neutrinos have mass.
This proof
that neutrinos have mass and the awarding of the Nobel Prize to Kajita and
McDonald have made the study of neutrinos one of the most promising fields of
physics today.
Our planet is
constantly being bombarded by trillions of neutrinos: neutrinos that were
produced during the first instants of the universe, neutrinos from
extragalactic sources, neutrinos created inside the Milky Way’s billions of
stars, neutrinos originating in our Sun, and neutrinos resulting from
collisions between cosmic rays and the Earth’s atmosphere. In addition to
these, there are also the neutrinos produced on Earth’s surface by beta decay,
a radioactive process that is frequently used in nuclear power plants – these
are the neutrinos being measured by the Double Chooz experiment.
In the beta
decay process, an unstable nucleus decays into a nucleus of a different element
by emitting a beta particle (an electron or a positron). In beta-minus decay, a
neutron is converted into a proton while emitting an electron and an electron
antineutrino. In beta-plus decay, a proton is converted into a neutron while
releasing a positron and an electron neutrino. In addition to these two kinds
of decay, analogous atomic reactions can also occur in the form of electron
capture. In this case, an electron in the atom’s inner shell is drawn into the
nucleus, where it combines with a proton to form a neutron and an electron
neutrino. The neutrino is ejected from the nucleus.
“The
phenomenon is significant at Chooz because of its powerful nuclear reactors,”
Chimenti said. “The Double Chooz experiment was designed to measure conversions
of electron neutrinos into other neutrinos as they travel away from their
source. The experiment is set to continue for one more year. It has already
provided very important measurements of the θ13 mixing angle, and
this raises great expectations for research on the matter-antimatter asymmetry
problem. CP violation could explain why we observe matter and not antimatter in
the universe.”
Source: English WebSite of the Agência FAPESP
Comentários
Postar um comentário