A Nobel for Neutrinos: Sudbury Neutrino Observatory

Discovery of neutrino oscillations, which shows that neutrinos have mass, garners the 2015 Nobel Prize in Physics.

Image courtesy of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Completion of the SNO detector: A technician crouches inside the 12-meter-diameter acrylic vessel, so clear it can hardly be seen. Surrounding him are almost 10,000 photomultipliers, sensitive detectors of the light flashes produced by neutrino interactions in the heavy water with which the vessel will be filled.

The Science

The 2015 Nobel Prize in Physics was shared by Arthur B. McDonald, the leader of the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory (SNO), and Takaaki Kajita, a leader of the Super-Kamiokande collaboration, “for the discovery of neutrino oscillations, which shows that neutrinos have mass.”

The Impact

The discovery of neutrino oscillations and mass has profoundly affected our understanding of these elusive particles, their role in the theoretical underpinning of physics, and the evolution of the universe. The success of nuclear-physics calculations of solar energy generation has been dramatically confirmed. The discovery, moreover, opens new doors to an understanding of such basic questions as why the universe contains more matter than antimatter, and what properties a new and successful standard model must have.

Summary

Neutrinos are neutral, weakly interacting particles produced abundantly in the big bang, by the sun, and by cosmic rays striking the earth’s atmosphere. They have long been thought to be massless, a prediction of the standard model of particles and fields. Beginning in the 1960s, Raymond Davis, Jr. began to measure the flux of neutrinos from the sun. His experiment and subsequent ones at Kamiokande in Japan, Baksan in Russia, and Gran Sasso in Italy all found that the flux was much smaller than expected. In 1985, Herbert Chen observed that if neutrinos oscillated, they would still arrive at earth but in “flavors” undetectable in the Davis experiment, which was designed for electron neutrinos. There are 3 flavors, electron, mu, and tau, but the sun can only make electron neutrinos. He proposed a detector based on heavy water that could detect all flavors equally. The result was the SNO detector, and in 2001 SNO showed that two-thirds of the electron neutrinos had converted to non-electron flavors. Super-Kamiokande had found in 1998 a similar effect in which mu neutrinos produced in the atmosphere converted to a non-electron flavor.  These conversions can only occur via a quantum-mechanical effect that requires neutrino mass to be non-zero.

The confirmation of the solar-neutrino flux predictions resolved a problem that had endured for more than 30 years and shows that nuclear processes in the sun’s core are understood very accurately. The discovery of neutrino mass forces a revision in our basic model of particles and fields. New theories are being developed, but a decisive choice cannot be made without more information. Experimental work to determine the actual mass (which is not given by oscillations), to answer the question of whether neutrinos and antineutrinos are the same particle, and to see if neutrinos respect a natural symmetry, the reversal of time,  need to be carried out. The discovery also means that neutrinos are a part of the dark matter in the universe, but only a small part. Nevertheless, their abundance and small mass mean that they affect the form and evolution of the largest skeins and clusters of galaxies in the universe.

Contact

Eugene W. Beier
University of Pennsylvania
geneb@hep.upenn.edu

R.G. Hamish Robertson
University of Washington
rghr@uw.edu

Funding

The research was supported by the following:

Canada: Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council, Industry Canada, National Research Council, Northern Ontario Heritage Fund, Atomic Energy of Canada, Ltd., Ontario Power Generation, Canada Foundation for Innovation

US: Department of Energy, Office of Science, Offices of Nuclear Physics and High Energy Physics

UK: Particle Physics and Astronomy Research Council.

Publications

Q.R. Ahmad,  et al.,  “Measurement of the rate of νe + d → p + p + e- interactions produced by 8B solar neutrinos at the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory." Physical Review Letters 87, 071301 (2001).

Q.R. Ahmad,  et al., “Direct evidence for neutrino flavor transformation from neutral-current interactions in the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory.” Physical Review Letters 89, 011301 (2002).

S.N. Ahmed, et al., “Measurement of the total active 8B Solar neutrino flux at the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory with enhanced neutral current sensitivity.” Physical Review Letters 92, 181301 (2004).

B. Aharmim, et al. “An independent measurement of the total active 8B solar neutrino flux using an array of 3He proportional counters at the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory.” Physical Review Letters 101, 111301 (2008).

Related Links

A Nobel for Neutrinos: Super-Kamiokande

Nobel Prize Press Release

Highlight Categories

Program: HEP , NP

Additional: Collaborations , International Collaboration