Fermilab Experiment Sees
Neutrinos Change over 500 Miles
Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, August 7, 2015
Scientists on the NOvA experiment saw their first
evidence of oscillating neutrinos, confirming that the extraordinary detector
built for the project not only functions as planned but is also making great
progress toward its goal of a major leap in our understanding of these ghostly
particles.
NOvA is on a quest to learn more about the abundant
yet mysterious particles called neutrinos, which flit through ordinary matter
as though it weren’t there. The first NOvA results, released this week at the
American Physical Society’s Division of Particles and Fields conference in Ann
Arbor, Michigan, verify that the experiment’s massive particle detector — 50
feet tall, 50 feet wide and 200 feet long — is sitting in the sweet spot and
detecting neutrinos fired from 500 miles away. Scientists have sorted through
millions of cosmic ray strikes and zeroed in on neutrino interactions.
“People are ecstatic to see our first observation
of neutrino oscillations,” said NOvA co-spokesperson Peter Shanahan of the U.S.
Department of Energy’s Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory. “For all the
people who worked over the course of a decade on the designing, building, commissioning
and operating this experiment, it’s beyond gratifying.”
Researchers have collected data aggressively since
February 2014, recording neutrino interactions in the 14,000-ton far detector
in Ash River , Minnesota , while construction was still
under way. This allowed the collaboration to gather data while testing systems
before starting operations with the complete detector in November 2014, shortly
after the experiment was completed on time and under budget. NOvA
construction and operations are supported by the DOE Office of Science.
The neutrino beam generated at Fermilab passes
through an underground near detector, which measures the beam’s neutrino
composition before it leaves the Fermilab site. The particles then travel more
than 500 miles straight through the Earth, no tunnel required, oscillating (or
changing types) along the way. About once per second, Fermilab’s accelerator
sends trillions of neutrinos to Minnesota ,
but the elusive neutrinos interact so rarely that only a few will register at the
far detector.
When a neutrino bumps into an atom in the NOvA
detector, it releases a signature trail of particles and light depending on
which type it is: an electron, muon or tau neutrino. The beam originating at
Fermilab is made almost entirely of one type — muon neutrinos — and scientists
can measure how many of those muon neutrinos disappear over their journey and
reappear as electron neutrinos.
If oscillations did not occur, experimenters
predicted they would see 201 muon neutrinos arrive at the NOvA far detector in
the data collected; instead, they saw a mere 33, proof that the muon neutrinos
were disappearing as they transformed into the two other flavors. Similarly, if
oscillations did not occur, scientists expected to see only one electron neutrino
appearance (due to background interactions). But the collaboration saw six such
events, evidence that some of the missing muon neutrinos had turned into
electron neutrinos.
Similar long-distance experiments such as T2K in Japan
and MINOS at Fermilab have seen these muon neutrino to electron neutrino
oscillations before. NOvA, which will take data for at least six years, is
seeing nearly equivalent results in a shorter time frame, something that bodes
well for the experiment’s ambitious goal of measuring neutrino properties that
have eluded other experiments so far.
“One of the reasons we’ve made such excellent
progress is the impressive Fermilab neutrino beam and accelerator team,” said
NOvA co-spokesperson Mark Messier of Indiana
University . “Having a beam
of that power running so efficiently gives us a real competitive edge and
allows us to gather data quickly.”
Fermilab’s flagship accelerator recently set a
high-energy neutrino beam world
record when it reached 521 kilowatts, and the laboratory is working on
improving the neutrino beam even further for projects such as NOvA and the
upcoming Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment. Researchers expect to reach 700
kilowatts early next calendar year, accumulating a slew of neutrino
interactions and tripling the amount of data recorded by year’s end.
Neutrinos are the most abundant massive particle in
the universe but are still poorly understood. While researchers know that
neutrinos come in three types, they don’t know which is the heaviest and which
is the lightest. Figuring out this ordering — one of the goals of the NOvA
experiment — would be a great litmus test for theories about how the neutrino gets
its mass. While the famed Higgs boson helps explain how some particles obtain
their masses, scientists don’t know yet how it is connected to neutrinos, if at
all. The measurement of the neutrino mass hierarchy is also crucial information
for neutrino experiments
trying to see if the neutrino is its own antiparticle.
Like T2K, NOvA can also run in antineutrino mode,
opening a window to see whether neutrinos and antineutrinos are fundamentally
different. An asymmetry early in the universe’s history could have tipped the
cosmic balance in favor of matter, making the world we see today possible.
Soon, scientists will be able to combine the neutrino results obtained by T2K,
MINOS and NOvA, yielding more precise answers about scientists’ most pressing
neutrino questions.
“The rapid success of the NOvA team demonstrates a
commitment and talent for taking on complex projects to answer the biggest
questions in particle physics,” said Fermilab Director Nigel Lockyer. “We’re
glad that the detectors are functioning beautifully and providing quality data
that will expand our understanding of the subatomic realm.”
The NOvA collaboration comprises 210 scientists and
engineers from 39 institutions in the United
States , Brazil ,
the Czech Republic , Greece , India ,
Russia and the United Kingdom .
Note: NOvA stands for NuMI Off-Axis Electron
Neutrino Appearance. NuMI is itself an acronym, standing for Neutrinos from the
Main Injector, Fermilab’s flagship accelerator. The
Fermilab Accelerator Complex is an Office of Science user facility.
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