
Major international collaboration has seen its first neutrinos 鈥 so-called 鈥榞host particles鈥 鈥 in the experiment鈥檚 newly built detector.听
Major international collaboration has seen its first neutrinos 鈥 so-called 鈥榞host particles鈥 鈥 in the experiment鈥檚 newly built detector.听
This is an important step towards the much larger Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment (DUNE)
Mark Thomson
An international team of scientists at the MicroBooNE physics experiment in the US, including researchers from the 探花直播 of Cambridge, detected their first neutrino candidates, which are also known as 'ghost particles'. It represents a milestone for the project, involving years of hard work and a 40-foot-long particle detector that is filled with 170 tons of liquid argon.
Neutrinos are subatomic, almost weightless particles that only interact via gravity or nuclear decay. Because they don鈥檛 interact with light, they can鈥檛 be seen. Neutrinos carry no electric charge and travel through the universe almost entirely unaffected by natural forces. They are considered a fundamental building block of matter. 探花直播2015 Nobel Prize in physics was awarded for neutrino oscillations, a phenomenon that is of great important to the field of elementary particle physics.
鈥淚t鈥檚 nine years since we proposed, designed, built, assembled and commissioned this experiment,鈥 said Bonnie Fleming, MicroBooNE co-spokesperson and a professor of physics at Yale 探花直播. 鈥淭hat kind of investment makes seeing first neutrinos incredible.鈥
Following a 13-week shutdown for maintenance, Fermilab鈥檚 accelerator complex near Chicago delivered a proton beam on Thursday, which is used to make the neutrinos, to the laboratory鈥檚 experiments. After the beam was turned on, scientists analysed the data recorded by MicroBooNE鈥檚 particle detector to find evidence of its first neutrino interactions.
Scientists at the 探花直播 of Cambridge have been working on advanced image reconstruction techniques that contributed to the ability to identify the rare neutrino interactions in the MicroBooNE data.
探花直播MicroBooNE experiment aims to study how neutrinos interact and change within a distance of 500 meters. 探花直播detector will help scientists reconstruct the results of neutrino collisions as finely detailed, three-dimensional images. MicroBooNE findings also will be relevant for the forthcoming Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment (DUNE), which will examine neutrino transitions over longer distances.
鈥淔uture neutrino experiments will use this technology,鈥 said Sam Zeller, Fermilab physicist and MicroBooNE co-spokesperson. 鈥淲e鈥檙e learning a lot from this detector. It鈥檚 important not just for us, but for the whole physics community.鈥
鈥淭his is an important step towards the much larger Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment (DUNE)鈥, said Professor Mark Thomson of Cambridge鈥檚 Cavendish Laboratory, co-spokesperson of the DUNE collaboration and member of MicroBooNE. 鈥淚t is the first time that fully automated pattern recognition software has been used to identify neutrino interactions from the complex images in a detector such as MicroBooNE and the proposed DUNE detector.鈥
Adapted from a Fermilab .
探花直播text in this work is licensed under a . For image use please see separate credits above.