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Measurement Anomalies In Nuclear Reactors Not Related To A New Particle

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The oddest known particle is probably a neutrino. They interact with other matter only by weak force, which means they hardly ever interact with anything. They are much, much lighter than any other particle with mass. Neutrinos come in three different flavors or sorts, and no single particle has a known identity. It can instead be thought of as a quantum superposition of all three tastes, oscillating between them. Not only that, but some odd data have raised the possibility of a fourth form of neutrino that is undetectable because it doesn't even interact via the weak force. Although the existence of these "sterile neutrinos" makes them difficult to directly address, they may be able to explain both the existence of dark matter and the low masses of the other neutrinos. Odd measurement results in tests using other flavors of neutrinos provide the strongest indications of their existence. However, a recent study disqualifies sterile neutrinos as the cause of one of these anomalies—while also establishing the veracity of the aberrant findings. Nuclear power plant - Wikipedia Photo Credit: Wikipedia Identifying the invisible There are two ways that particles can interact with other matter: directly, or by decomposing into one or more other particles that do. Sterile neutrinos are therefore undetectable for this reason. They should not degrade into anything because they are fundamental particles. Additionally, because of their low masses, they can only interact with other matter gravitationally, making direct detection impossible. Instead, we might be able to find them by observing neutrino oscillations. Then, you can try to detect those neutrinos using an experiment that generates a certain kind of neutrinos at a known rate. Some of the neutrinos you generated will oscillate into the identity of sterile neutrinos if there are any, making them undetectable. Thus, you find that you measure fewer neutrinos than you anticipated. Nuclear reactors have experienced just that. Nuclear reactors produce large quantities of neutrinos as one of the by-products of radioactive decay (powered by the weak force). However, measurements using adjacent detectors found roughly 6% fewer neutrinos than anticipated. That disparity could be explained by a quick oscillation into sterile neutrinos. Physics - Hunting the Sterile Neutrino Photo Credit: Physics APS.org However, these experiments are very challenging. Only a small percentage of the total number of neutrinos produced contact with detectors, which is extremely rare. A further extremely complex environment is a nuclear reactor. Even when you begin with a pure sample of a single radioactive isotope, decays swiftly produce a complex mixture of new elements, some of which are radioactive and others not. The reactor apparatus can produce new radioactive isotopes as a result of the neutrons released. It is therefore difficult to determine how many neutrinos you first make and what portion of those neutrinos will be detected by your detector. It is difficult to know for sure whether any irregularities in neutrino measurements are true for all the aforementioned reasons. Physicists frequently adopt a "wait and see" approach when there are signs that something unexpected is happening. What Do We Picture When We Want Pictures Of Physics? Photo Credit: Forbes Physicists aren't all wait-and-see, though. Some of them set out to construct an experiment to see if the unusual readings were indicative of sterile neutrinos. The STEREO experiment is located next to a research reactor that uses a highly pure version of a single isotope of uranium to operate, greatly reducing the uncertainty associated with neutrino production. STEREO consists of a line of detectors constructed in an array along which the reactor is being moved away from. Neutrino oscillations have a predictable frequency over time and are probabilistic in nature. Additionally, because the neutrinos from the reactor are traveling at high speeds, the likelihood of an oscillation changes with distance (i.e., time means distance for a moving object). Therefore, the amount of oscillation you observe should vary depending on whatever detector in the array you are looking at. As a result, the percentage of oscillating neutrinos in the whole population should differ from the percentage at the fifth detector by the time they reach the first detector. Both detectors should show an abnormality, but it will seem different in each. Neutrino oscillation - Wikipedia Photo Credit: Wikipedia (Real enthusiasts of neutrinos will point out that there are some oscillations that last long enough for all the neutrinos to have long since passed a detector that is so near the source. This is real. However, the particular oscillation in this case, from the electron antineutrino to the sterile neutrino, should happen swiftly. Additionally, all of the earlier aberrant data originated from detectors situated close to reactors. Also Read: iFixit Found Something Quirky in the Pixel Watch, See Video By turning a proton into a neutron and releasing a positron, which can be detected by STEREO, neutrinos are able to be detected. The researchers used data from the reactor's unfueled state to acquire a sense of the background signal before subtracting it from their own data since other events, mostly caused by cosmic rays, can be mistaken for the positron's signal. The STEREO team could obtain approximately 400 neutrino detections per day when the reactor was operating, and they used data from more than 100,000 occurrences to produce the new report. The measurements show that the abnormality is unquestionably present. STEREO detects less neutrinos than our reactor models predict should be generated. Nevertheless, a smooth probabilistic oscillation is not able to account for the variation in the anomaly from detector to detector. Therefore, you cannot support the existence of sterile neutrinos using the strange measurement data. Neutrino detector - Wikipedia Photo Credit: Wikipedia So why is there even a measurement anomaly? The researchers provide other evidence that implies we might be misinterpreting the specifics of the uranium fission processes, which could betray our expectations on the number of neutrinos generated. In other words, our current models of neutrino creation and behavior might be adequate, but we still need to improve our understanding of the more commonplace process of fission. Neutrinos that have been rendered sterile are still alive. The difficulties of working with neutrinos means that there will probably always be another experimental anomaly that sterile neutrinos may explain, even though this experiment excludes them as the cause of this particular anomaly.

By Prelo Con

Following my passion by reviewing latest tech. Just love it.

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