A neutrino is created or detected in one of three flavor states named after the electron, muon, and tau particles. But those are not the stationary states of well-defined mass. As a result, an electron neutrino leaving the Sun and headed toward Earth, for example, could change flavor on the way and avoid notice by electron-neutrino detectors. That phenomenon—vacuum neutrino oscillation—has been confirmed in numerous experiments and was a key to understanding one of the great mysteries of 20th-century physics: Why do we observe so many fewer solar electron neutrinos than we expect based on reliable models of neutrino production in the Sun’s core? But vacuum neutrino oscillation alone is not enough to solve the solar-neutrino problem. The second important ingredient leading to neutrino metamorphosis arises because electron neutrinos traveling from the Sun’s core to its surface interact more strongly with solar matter than do other flavors. The effect of...
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1 April 2014
April 01 2014
Citation
Steven K. Blau; To catch a solar neutrino, search at night. Physics Today 1 April 2014; 67 (4): 20–21. https://doi.org/10.1063/PT.3.2338
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