Why neutrinos matter - Sílvia Bravo Gallart

448,339 views ・ 2015-04-28

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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They're everywhere, but you will never see one.
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Trillions of them are flying through you right this second,
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but you can't feel them.
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These ghost particles are called neutrinos and if we can catch them,
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they can tell us about the furthest reaches
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and most extreme environments of the universe.
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Neutrinos are elementary particles,
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meaning that they can't be subdivided into other particles the way atoms can.
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Elementary particles are the smallest known building blocks
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of everything in the universe,
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and the neutrino is one of the smallest of the small.
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A million times less massive than an electron,
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neutrinos fly easily through matter, unaffected by magnetic fields.
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In fact, they hardly ever interact with anything.
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That means that they can travel through the universe in a straight line
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for millions, or even billions, of years,
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safely carrying information about where they came from.
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So where do they come from?
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Pretty much everywhere.
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They're produced in your body from the radioactive decay of potassium.
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Cosmic rays hitting atoms in the Earth's atmosphere
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create showers of them.
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They're produced by nuclear reactions inside the sun
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and by radioactive decay inside the Earth.
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And we can generate them in nuclear reactors
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and particle accelerators.
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But the highest energy neutrinos are born far out in space
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in environments that we know very little about.
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Something out there, maybe supermassive black holes,
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or maybe some cosmic dynamo we've yet to discover,
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accelerates cosmic rays to energies over a million times greater
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than anything human-built accelerators have achieved.
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These cosmic rays, most of which are protons,
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interact violently with the matter and radiation around them,
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producing high-energy neutrinos,
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which propagate out like cosmic breadcrumbs
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that can tell us about the locations
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and interiors of the universe's most powerful cosmic engines.
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That is, if we can catch them.
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Neutrinos' limited interactions with other matter
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might make them great messengers,
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but it also makes them extremely hard to detect.
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One way to do so is to put a huge volume of pure transparent material in their path
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and wait for a neutrino to reveal itself
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by colliding with the nucleus of an atom.
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That's what's happening in Antarctica at IceCube,
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the world's largest neutrino telescope.
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It's set up within a cubic kilometer of ice
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that has been purified by the pressure
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of thousands of years of accumulated ice and snow,
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to the point where it's one of the clearest solids on Earth.
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And even though it's shot through with boreholes holding over 5,000 detectors,
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most of the cosmic neutrinos racing through IceCube will never leave a trace.
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But about ten times a year,
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a single high-energy neutrino collides with a molecule of ice,
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shooting off sparks of charged subatomic particles
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that travel faster through the ice than light does.
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In a similar way to how a jet that exceeds the speed of sound
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produces a sonic boom,
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these superluminal charged particles leave behind a cone of blue light,
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kind of a photonic boom.
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This light spreads through IceCube,
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hitting some of its detectors located over a mile beneath the surface.
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Photomultiplier tubes amplify the signal,
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which contains information about the charged particles' paths and energies.
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The data are beamed to astrophysicists around the world
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who look at the patterns of light
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for clues about the neutrinos that produced them.
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These super energetic collisions are so rare
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that IceCube's scientists give each neutrino nicknames,
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like Big Bird and Dr. Strangepork.
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IceCube has already observed
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the highest energy cosmic neutrinos ever seen.
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The neutrinos it detects should finally tell us where cosmic rays come from
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and how they reached such extreme energies.
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Light, from infrared, to x-rays, to gamma rays,
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has given us increasingly energetic
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and continuously surprising views of the universe.
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We are now at the dawn of the age of neutrino astronomy,
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and we have no idea what revelations IceCube
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and other neutrino telescopes may bring us
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about the universe's most violent, most energetic phenomena.
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