Japanese T2K experiment sees evidence of a new type of neutrino "flavor change" | Astronomy.com (2024)

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An international collaboration reported first indications of the production of electron neutrinos from muon neutrinos, raising the prospect that it may be possible for future experiments to test for violation of the symmetry between matter and antimatter.

Bythe Science and Technology Facilities Council, United Kingdom | Published: June 20, 2011| Last updated on May 18, 2023

Where did all the matter in the universe come from? This is one of the biggest mysteries in fundamental physics, and exciting results released from the international T2K neutrino experiment in Japan could be an important step toward resolving this puzzle.

The intriguing results indicate a new property of the enigmatic particles known as neutrinos.

There are three types of neutrinos (called flavors): one paired by particle interactions with the familiar electron (called the electron neutrino); and two more paired with the electron’s heavier cousins, the mu and tau leptons. Previous experiments around the world have shown that these different flavors of neutrinos can spontaneously change into each other, a phenomenon called “neutrino oscillation.”

Researchers have already observed two types of oscillations, but in its first full period of operation the T2K experiment has already seen evidence for a new type of oscillation (the appearance of electron neutrinos in a muon neutrino beam). This means that researchers have now observed that neutrinos can oscillate in every way possible.

This level of complexity opens the possibility that the oscillations of neutrinos and their antiparticles (called antineutrinos) could be different. And if the oscillations of neutrinos and antineutrinos are different, it would be an example of what physicists call CP violation. This could be the key to explaining why there is more matter than antimatter in the universe (an excess which could not happen within the known laws of physics).

The experiment ran from January 2010 until March 11 this year, when it was dramatically interrupted by the Japanese earthquake. Fortunately, the multinational T2K team were unharmed, and their highly sensitive detectors were largely undamaged. Six clean electron neutrino events are observed in the data from before the earthquake, while in the absence of oscillations there should only have been 1.5. Even though such an excess could only happen by chance about one time in a hundred, that is not good enough to confirm a new physics discovery, so this is called an “indication.”

Professor Dave Wark of the Science and Technology Facilities Council in the United Kingdom and Imperial College London, who served for 4 years as the iInternational co-spokesperson of the experiment and is head of the UK group, explained, “People sometimes think that scientific discoveries are like light switches that click from ‘off’ to ‘on’, but in reality it goes from ‘maybe’ to ‘probably’ to ‘almost certainly’ as you get more data. Right now, we are somewhere between ‘probably’ and ‘almost certainly’.”

Professor Christos Touramanis from Liverpool University is the project manager for the UK contributions to T2K: “We have examined the near detectors and turned some of them back on, and everything that we have tried works pretty well. So far it looks like our earthquake engineering was good enough, but we never wanted to see it tested so thoroughly.”

Professor Takashi Kobayashi of the KEK Laboratory in Japan and spokesperson for the T2K experiment said, “It shows the power of our experimental design that with only 2 percent of our design data we are already the most sensitive experiment in the world for looking for this new type of oscillation.”

Japan’s T2K neutrino experiment has seen evidence for a new type of oscillation (the appearance of electron neutrinos in a muon neutrino beam). This means that researchers have now observed that neutrinos can oscillate in every way possible.

University of Tokyo

Where did all the matter in the universe come from? This is one of the biggest mysteries in fundamental physics, and exciting results released from the international T2K neutrino experiment in Japan could be an important step toward resolving this puzzle.

The intriguing results indicate a new property of the enigmatic particles known as neutrinos.

There are three types of neutrinos (called flavors): one paired by particle interactions with the familiar electron (called the electron neutrino); and two more paired with the electron’s heavier cousins, the mu and tau leptons. Previous experiments around the world have shown that these different flavors of neutrinos can spontaneously change into each other, a phenomenon called “neutrino oscillation.”

Researchers have already observed two types of oscillations, but in its first full period of operation the T2K experiment has already seen evidence for a new type of oscillation (the appearance of electron neutrinos in a muon neutrino beam). This means that researchers have now observed that neutrinos can oscillate in every way possible.

This level of complexity opens the possibility that the oscillations of neutrinos and their antiparticles (called antineutrinos) could be different. And if the oscillations of neutrinos and antineutrinos are different, it would be an example of what physicists call CP violation. This could be the key to explaining why there is more matter than antimatter in the universe (an excess which could not happen within the known laws of physics).

The experiment ran from January 2010 until March 11 this year, when it was dramatically interrupted by the Japanese earthquake. Fortunately, the multinational T2K team were unharmed, and their highly sensitive detectors were largely undamaged. Six clean electron neutrino events are observed in the data from before the earthquake, while in the absence of oscillations there should only have been 1.5. Even though such an excess could only happen by chance about one time in a hundred, that is not good enough to confirm a new physics discovery, so this is called an “indication.”

Professor Dave Wark of the Science and Technology Facilities Council in the United Kingdom and Imperial College London, who served for 4 years as the iInternational co-spokesperson of the experiment and is head of the UK group, explained, “People sometimes think that scientific discoveries are like light switches that click from ‘off’ to ‘on’, but in reality it goes from ‘maybe’ to ‘probably’ to ‘almost certainly’ as you get more data. Right now, we are somewhere between ‘probably’ and ‘almost certainly’.”

Professor Christos Touramanis from Liverpool University is the project manager for the UK contributions to T2K: “We have examined the near detectors and turned some of them back on, and everything that we have tried works pretty well. So far it looks like our earthquake engineering was good enough, but we never wanted to see it tested so thoroughly.”

Professor Takashi Kobayashi of the KEK Laboratory in Japan and spokesperson for the T2K experiment said, “It shows the power of our experimental design that with only 2 percent of our design data we are already the most sensitive experiment in the world for looking for this new type of oscillation.”

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Japanese T2K experiment sees evidence of a new type of neutrino "flavor change" | Astronomy.com (2024)

FAQs

What causes neutrinos to change flavor? ›

But the neutrinos don't get their flavor from how heavy they are. Instead, their flavor is determined by how heavy their charged lepton partner is when the neutrino is created (or from how heavy the charged lepton is that gets produced when the neutrino interacts).

What were the results of the neutrino experiment? ›

The data favor the "normal" ordering of neutrino masses more strongly than before, but ambiguity remains around the neutrino's oscillation properties. The latest NOvA data provide a very precise measurement of the bigger splitting between the squared neutrino masses and slightly favor the normal mass ordering.

What is the flavor of a neutrino? ›

Neutrinos come in three flavors: electron neutrino, muon neutrino, and tau neutrino. They also have corresponding antiparticles, collectively called antineutrinos. Sometimes, the term "neutrinos" refers to both neutrinos and antineutrinos.

What is the evidence for the existence of the neutrino? ›

The first evidence of the reality of neutrinos came in 1938 via simultaneous cloud-chamber measurements of the electron and the recoil of the nucleus.

Can neutrinos affect humans? ›

Each second of every day of your entire life, more than a trillion neutrinos from the sun pass through your body. While other particles (x-rays, electrons, protons, etc.) can negatively affect human health when entering a body in large quantities, neutrinos have absolutely no effect, whatsoever.

What 3 different flavors can neutrinos oscillate between? ›

Scientists know about three neutrino flavors (the electron neutrino, muon neutrino, and tau neutrino) so far, which are related to the three charged lepton flavors (the electron, muon and tau).

What can neutrinos tell us about the universe? ›

Neutrinos could explain why the Universe didn't just disappear after the Big Bang. Studying the fundamental particles known as neutrinos could reveal why there is any matter in the Universe at all.

How do neutrinos affect the earth? ›

Neutrinos play a role in many fundamental aspects of our lives; they are produced in nuclear fusion processes that power the sun and stars, they are produced in radioactive decays that provide a source of heat inside our planet, and they are produced in nuclear reactors.

How long do neutrinos live? ›

Neutrinos do not decay. They are stable because there is nothing lighter for them to decay into, except photons; photons do not have lepton number, and as far as anyone can tell, lepton number is absolutely conserved.

Can you touch neutrinos? ›

Slow-moving neutrinos pass through matter more easily than fast-moving ones, so only a few, if any, of those 300 decillion neutrinos would interact with your hand at all.

What flavor is quark? ›

Quark is technically a soft cheese. However, its taste and texture are more like a thick yogurt than anything else. Similarly, its fat and protein content (relatively low in fat and high in protein) is more comparable to yogurt than cheese.

What does neutrino mixing from one flavor to another implies that? ›

There is now convincing evidence that atmospheric, solar, and reactor neutrinos change from one flavor to another. There is also very strong evidence that accelerator neutrinos do this as well. Barring exotic possibilities, neutrino flavor change implies that neutrinos have masses and that leptons mix.

Do neutrinos have energy? ›

Because neutrinos come in a very broad range of energies, an even broader range of techniques have to be used to see them. The lowest-energy neutrinos come from just a few seconds after the Big Bang, and it is expected that these neutrinos have only a fraction of an electronvolt of energy.

Can neutrinos decay? ›

If neutrinos have masses and mixings, in general some will decay. In models with new particles and new couplings, some decay modes can be fast enough to be of phenomenological interest.

Can neutrinos annihilate? ›

They do, but they can also annihilate with their charged partners. From Wikipedia: To conserve total lepton number (in nuclear beta decay), electron neutrinos only appear together with positrons (anti-electrons) or electron antineutrinos, whereas electron antineutrinos only appear with electrons or electron neutrinos.

Why do quarks change flavor? ›

Flavour can change in particle reactions only through the agency of the weak force, as when, for example, a muon changes into an electron or a neutron (containing two down quarks and one up quark) transmutes into a proton (made from two up quarks and one down quark).

Which force changes quark flavour? ›

The weak interaction, or weak force, is one of the four fundamental forces and plays a vital role in the behavior of subatomic particles. It is distinctive in that it can induce a change in the flavor of quarks, an attribute not shared by the other fundamental forces.

Can leptons change flavour? ›

In the SM of particle physics, lepton flavour is always conserved, i.e. there is no interaction that changes the net flavour content of an interaction involving leptons.

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