In what they call a "weird little corner" of the already weird world of
neutrinos, physicists have found evidence that these tiny particles
might be involved in a surprising reaction.
Neutrinos are famous for almost never interacting. As an example, ten
trillion neutrinos pass through your hand every second, and fewer than
one actually interacts with any of the atoms that make up your hand.
However, when neutrinos do interact with another particle, it happens at
very close distances and involves a high-momentum transfer.
And yet a new paper, published in Physical Review Letters
this week, shows that neutrinos sometimes can also interact with a
nucleus but leave it basically untouched -- inflicting no more than a
"glancing blow" -- resulting in a particle being created out of a
vacuum.
Professor Kevin McFarland is a scientific co-spokesperson with the
international MINERvA collaboration, which carries out neutrino
scattering experiments at Fermilab McFarland, who also heads up the
Rochester team that was primarily responsible for the analysis of the
results, compares neutrino interactions to the firing of a bullet at a
bubble, only to find the bubble was left intact.
"The bubble -- a carbon nucleus in the experiment -- deflects the
neutrino 'bullet' by creating a particle from the vacuum," McFarland
explains. "This effectively shields the bubble from getting blasted
apart and instead the bullet only delivers a gentle bump to the bubble."
Producing an entirely new particle -- in this case a charged pion --
requires much more energy than it would take to blast the nucleus apart
-- which is why the physicists are always surprised that the reaction
happens as often as it does. McFarland adds that even painstakingly
detailed theoretical calculations for this reaction "have been all over
the map."
"The production of pions from this reaction had not been observed
consistently in other experiments," McFarland said. By using a new
technique, they were able to measure how much momentum and energy were
transferred to the carbon nucleus -- showing that it remained
undisturbed -- and the distribution of the pions that were created.
"After analyzing the results, we now have overwhelming evidence for the process," McFarland says.
The two members of the collaboration who were primarily responsible
for analyzing the results were Aaron Higuera, at the time a postdoc at
Rochester and now at the University of Houston, and Aaron Mislivec, one
of McFarland's Ph.D. students.
Working with Higuera, Mislivec wrote the computer code that allowed
them to sift through the results and get a picture of the reaction. "Our
detector gave us access to the full information of exactly what was
happening in this reaction," Mislivec explains. "Our data was consistent
with the unique fingerprint of this reaction and determined how these
interactions happen and how often." The key to identifying the reaction
was finding undisturbed carbon nuclei and then studying the two
resulting particles -- the pion, which is responsible for shielding the
nucleus, and the muon.
Understanding this reaction, McFarland states, "is not going to make a
better mousetrap, but it is exciting to learn that this weird reaction
really does take place."
Researchers in the MINERvA collaboration measure low energy neutrino
interactions both to support neutrino oscillation experiments and study
the strong dynamics of the nucleon and nucleus that affect the
interactions.
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