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Georgia Karagiorgi,
MIT: Booster Neutrino Experiment (MiniBooNE) data indicates matter and
antimatter may behave differently
August 12, 2010
Neutrinos, elementary particles generated by nuclear reactions in the
sun, suffer from an identity crisis as they cross the universe, morphing
between three different “flavors.” Their antimatter counterparts (which
are identical in mass but opposite in charge and spin) do the same
thing.
A graphic of a neutrino
event recorded by the MiniBooNE experiment. The ring of light,
registered by some of the more than 1,000 light sensors inside the
detector, indicates the collision of a muon neutrino with an atomic
nuclei. Graphic: Fermilab
A team of physicists including some from MIT has found surprising
differences between the flavor-switching behavior of neutrinos and
antineutrinos. If confirmed, the finding could help explain why matter,
and not antimatter, dominates our universe.
“People are very excited about it because it suggests that there are
differences between neutrinos and antineutrinos,” says Georgia
Karagiorgi, an MIT graduate student and one of the leaders of the
analysis of experimental data produced by the Booster Neutrino
Experiment (MiniBooNE) at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory.
The new result, announced in June and submitted to the journal Physical
Review Letters, appears to be one of the first observed violations of CP
symmetry: the theory that matter and antimatter should behave in the
same way. CP symmetry violation has been seen before in quarks, another
type of elementary particle that makes up protons and neutrons, but
never in neutrinos or electrons.
The finding could also force physicists to revise their Standard Model,
which catalogs all of the known particles that make up matter. The model
now posits only three flavors of neutrino, but a fourth (or fifth or
sixth) may be necessary to explain the new results.
“If this should be proven to be correct, it would have major
implications for particle physics,” says John Learned, professor of
physics at the University of Hawaii, who is not part of the MiniBooNE
team.
So far, the researchers have enough data to present their results with a
confidence level of just below 99.7 percent (also called 3 sigma), which
is not high enough to claim a new discovery. To reach that level,
5-sigma confidence (99.99994 percent) is required. “People are going to
rightfully demand a really clean, 5-sigma result,” says Learned.
Unexpected oscillations
Since the 1960s, physicists have been gathering evidence that neutrinos
can switch, or oscillate, between three different flavors — muon,
electron and tau, each of which has a different mass. However, they have
not yet been able to rule out the possibility that more types of
neutrino might exist.
In an effort to help nail down the number of neutrinos, MiniBooNE
physicists send beams of neutrinos or antineutrinos down a 500-meter
tunnel, at the end of which sits a 250,000-gallon tank of mineral oil.
When neutrinos or antineutrinos collide with a carbon atom in the
mineral oil, the energy traces left behind allow physicists to identify
what flavor of neutrino took part in the collision. Neutrinos, which
have no charge, rarely interact with other matter, so such collisions
are rare.
MiniBooNE was set up in 2002 to confirm or refute a controversial
finding from an experiment at the Liquid Scintillator Neutrino Detector
(LSND) at Los Alamos National Laboratory. In 1990, the LSND reported
that a higher-than-expected number of antineutrinos appeared to be
oscillating over relatively short distances, which suggests the
existence of a fourth type of neutrino, known as a “sterile” neutrino.
In 2007, MiniBooNE researchers announced that their neutrino experiments
did not produce oscillations similar to those seen at LSND. At the time,
they assumed the same would hold true for antineutrinos. “In 2007, I
would have told you that you can pretty much rule out LSND,” says MIT
physics professor Janet Conrad, a member of the MiniBooNE collaboration
and an author of the new paper.
MiniBooNE
then switched to antineutrino mode and collected data for the next three
years. The research team didn’t look at all of the data until earlier
this year, when they were shocked to find more oscillations than would
be expected from only three neutrino flavors — the same result as LSND.
Already, theoretical physicists are posting papers online with theories
to account for the new results. However, “there’s no clear and immediate
explanation,” says Karsten Heeger, a neutrino physicist at the
University of Wisconsin. “To nail it down, we need more data from
MiniBooNE, and then we need to experimentally test it in a different
way.”
The MiniBooNE team plans to collect antineutrino data for another 18
months. Conrad also hopes to launch a new experiment that would use a
cyclotron, a type of particle accelerator in which particles travel in a
circle instead of a straight line, to help confirm or refute the
MiniBooNE results. |