由买买提看人间百态

boards

本页内容为未名空间相应帖子的节选和存档,一周内的贴子最多显示50字,超过一周显示500字 访问原贴
Military版 - Potential Nobel-prize project on-going?
相关主题
狭义相对论可能被推翻杨政宁看了偷笑
核事故对核物理研究的影响是毁灭性的本版有几个敢自称科学家的?
中微子被发现超光速旅行中国科学院高能物理研究所关于国际互联网出口故障的紧急通知 (转载)
安倍:销毁全世界核武器是日本的使命 zz李政道明显比杨振宁对我天朝贡献大得多!
美国的无人潜艇,通讯贷款怎么解决啊v5:英国五名男生涉嫌开学前夕纵火烧学校
台湾一高人道破大陆布局:全岛震动美国大使馆官方博客:在美国买房要花哪些钱
中国下一代航母计划太惊人上照片,大家也认识一下(图)
质疑引力波的,炸药奖来打脸白宫否认允许非法移民在8年内成美国合法公民
相关话题的讨论汇总
话题: neutrinos话题: neutrino话题: china话题: juno话题: mass
进入Military版参与讨论
1 (共1页)
b**k
发帖数: 3472
1
China Builds Mammoth Detector to Probe Mysteries of Neutrino Mass
Jane Qiu*
View larger version:
In this pageIn a new window
Download PowerPoint Slide for Teaching
Heavy hitter. China hopes its planned JUNO detector, 38 meters across, will
be the first to nail which of the three neutrino flavors is heavier or
lighter.
CREDITS: (INSET) IHEP; (SOURCE) M. BLENNOW ET AL. ARXIV 1311.1822 (2013)
BEIJING—It isn't easy to weigh a ghost. After neutrinos were hypothesized
in 1930, it took physicists 67 years to prove that these elusive particles—
which zip through our bodies by the trillions each second—have mass at all.
Now, a Chinese-led team is planning a mammoth neutrino detector, meant to
capture enough neutrinos from nearby nuclear reactors to determine which of
the three known types, or flavors, of neutrinos are heavier or lighter. That
mass hierarchy could be key to explaining how neutrinos get their mass, and
measuring it would be a coup for China's particle physicists.
Last month, scientists gathered in Jiangmen, in China's southern Guangdong
province, to review plans for the Jiangmen Underground Neutrino Observatory
(JUNO). Groundbreaking is slated for later this year on the $300 million
facility, which China aims to complete by 2019. The facility, which backers
say will be twice as sensitive as existing detectors, should not only pin
down key properties of neutrinos themselves but also detect telltale
neutrinos from nuclear reactions in the sun, Earth, and supernovas.
Other planned facilities aim to reveal the mass hierarchy (see table), but
China could be the first to arrive at an ironclad result. If China can pull
it off, says William McDonough, a geologist at the University of Maryland,
College Park, JUNO "will not only lead to breakthroughs in neutrino physics,
but revolutionize the field of geology and astrophysics." A successful
project would also mark another triumph for China's neutrino research, 2
years after the Daya Bay Reactor Neutrino Experiment in Guangdong nailed a
key parameter describing how different types of neutrinos morph into one
another (Science, 16 March 2012, p. 1287).
In 1998, physicists working with the subterranean particle detector Super-
Kamiokande in Japan showed that neutrinos of one flavor, muon neutrinos
generated by cosmic rays in the atmosphere, can change flavor as they zip
through Earth. In 2001, researchers at the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory in
Canada proved that electron neutrinos from the sun do the same. Such
neutrino "oscillations" prove that neutrinos have mass: Without it, the
particles would move at light speed and—according to relativity—time would
stand still for them, making change impossible.
Knowing a neutrino has mass isn't the same as knowing what it weighs. In the
simplest model, neutrino oscillations depend on just six parameters—the
three mass differences among the neutrinos and three abstract "mixing angles
." Physicists have measured all six—including the last mixing angle, which
was measured by Daya Bay. They know that two of the neutrinos are close in
mass and one is further off. But they don't know whether there are two
lighter neutrinos and one heavier one—the so-called normal hierarchy—or an
inverse hierarchy of two heavier ones and one light one.
How the masses shake out "is fundamental for a whole series of questions,"
says Wang Yifang, director of the Institute of High Energy Physics (IHEP)
here, including whether neutrinos, like other particles, get mass from
tangling with Higgs bosons or from a more exotic mechanism. The answer
depends on whether the neutrino is, oddly, its own antiparticle. Physicists
may be able to tell that by searching for a weird new type of radioactive
decay. But, if it even exists, that decay would occur at an observable rate
only if neutrinos follow an inverse hierarchy.
To explore this frontier, an international team led by Wang will build a
detector 700 meters beneath a granite hill near Jiangmen, equidistant from
two nuclear power plant complexes. A sphere about 38 meters in diameter will
contain 20,000 tons of a material known as a liquid scintillator. About 60
times a day, one of the sextillion or so electron neutrinos spraying from
the reactors every second should bump into an atomic nucleus, sparking a
flash of scintillation light that the detector can measure and analyze. In
the 53 kilometers that the neutrinos will traverse from reactor to detector,
about 70% will change flavor, says Cao Jun, a particle physicist at IHEP.
By studying the energy spectrum of the neutrinos, physicists should be able
to tease out the mass hierarchy. "But it's not going to be easy because the
amount of energy to be measured is minuscule," Cao says. He estimates the
measurement will require 6 years of data-taking.
The key to JUNO's success will be its energy resolution. The largest liquid
scintillation detector to date—KamLAND in Japan, which has 1000 tons of
detector fluid—can only make out energy differences of greater than 6%.
JUNO needs to double the resolution to 3%—no mean feat, especially as the
larger volume of scintillator itself absorbs more light.
If it works, JUNO should also make finer measurements of the known mixing
angles and mass differences. "This is particularly important for the search
for a possible fourth form of neutrinos," says Lothar Oberauer of the
Technical University of Munich in Germany. If the sum of all oscillations
doesn't add up to 100%, then the data would point to a fourth flavor (
Science, 21 October 2011, p. 304)—a possibility that could topple the
standard model of particle physics and help explain a host of astronomical
puzzles.
Another mission for JUNO is to observe geoneutrinos emitted during
radioactive decay in Earth's deep interior, which generates heat that helps
drive plate tectonics and power our planet's magnetic field. Detecting
geoneutrinos "is the only way to get a glimpse of Earth's internal heat
budget and distribution," McDonough says. The three facilities now detecting
geoneutrinos, including the revamped Sudbury detector, record about 45 a
year in total. JUNO should spot about 500 a year, enough to test various
models of Earth's composition and heat flow, McDonough says. And that would
score China another triumph in neutrino physics.
↵* Jane Qiu is a writer in Beijing.
1 (共1页)
进入Military版参与讨论
相关主题
白宫否认允许非法移民在8年内成美国合法公民美国的无人潜艇,通讯贷款怎么解决啊
美国表示愿与朝鲜进行可信谈判台湾一高人道破大陆布局:全岛震动
美千余民众包围白宫 奥巴马携夫人谈判中国下一代航母计划太惊人
美国有人在白宫外绝食了质疑引力波的,炸药奖来打脸
狭义相对论可能被推翻杨政宁看了偷笑
核事故对核物理研究的影响是毁灭性的本版有几个敢自称科学家的?
中微子被发现超光速旅行中国科学院高能物理研究所关于国际互联网出口故障的紧急通知 (转载)
安倍:销毁全世界核武器是日本的使命 zz李政道明显比杨振宁对我天朝贡献大得多!
相关话题的讨论汇总
话题: neutrinos话题: neutrino话题: china话题: juno话题: mass