Neutrinos

Geoneutrino

A geoneutrino is a neutrino or antineutrino emitted in decay of radionuclide naturally occurring in the Earth. Neutrinos, the lightest of the known subatomic particles, lack measurable electromagnetic properties and interact only via the weak nuclear force when ignoring gravity. Matter is virtually transparent to neutrinos and consequently they travel, unimpeded, at near light speed through the Earth from their point of emission. Collectively, geoneutrinos carry integrated information about the abundances of their radioactive sources inside the Earth. A major objective of the emerging field of neutrino geophysics involves extracting geologically useful information (e.g., abundances of individual geoneutrino-producing elements and their spatial distribution in Earth's interior) from geoneutrino measurements. Analysts from the Borexino collaboration have been able to get to 53 events of neutrinos originating from the interior of the Earth. Most geoneutrinos are electron antineutrinos originating in β− decay branches of 40K, 232Th and 238U. Together these decay chains account for more than 99% of the present-day radiogenic heat generated inside the Earth. Only geoneutrinos from 232Th and 238U decay chains are detectable by the inverse beta-decay mechanism on the free proton because these have energies above the corresponding threshold (1.8 MeV). In neutrino experiments, large underground liquid scintillator detectors record the flashes of light generated from this interaction. As of 2016 geoneutrino measurements at two sites, as reported by the KamLAND and Borexino collaborations, have begun to place constraints on the amount of radiogenic heating in the Earth's interior. A third detector (SNO+) is expected to start collecting data in 2017. JUNO experiment is under construction in Southern China. Another geoneutrino detecting experiment is planned at the China Jinping Underground Laboratory. (Wikipedia).

Geoneutrino
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What are Neutrinos?

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From playlist Science Unplugged: Neutrinos

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Why I Love Neutrinos

Why I Love Neutrinos is a series spotlighting those mysterious, abundant, ghostly particles that are all around us. This installment features a compilation of international scientists. For more information on neutrinos, visit the Fermilab website at http://www.fnal.gov.

From playlist Why I Love Neutrinos

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What are neutrinos good for? | Even Bananas

Neutrinos are powerful tools for better understanding how the universe works and improving our theories, like the famed Standard Model. But what else are neutrinos good for? Neutrino physicist Kirsty Duffy explains some of the (mostly not-so-practical) ways we might use neutrinos. Referen

From playlist Neutrinos

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Neutrinos: Nature's Identity Thieves?

The oscillation of neutrinos from one variety to another has long been suspected, but was confirmed only about 15 years ago. In order for these oscillations to occur, neutrinos must have a mass, no matter how slight. Since neutrinos have long been thought to be massless, in a very real w

From playlist Neutrinos

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Where do the neutrinos that rain down on Earth come from?

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From playlist Science Unplugged: Neutrinos

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Why I Love Neutrinos - Elena Gramellini

Why I Love Neutrinos is a series spotlighting those mysterious, abundant, ghostly particles that are all around us. This installment features Yale Graduate Student Elena Gramellini. For more information on neutrinos, visit the Fermilab website at http://www.fnal.gov.

From playlist Why I Love Neutrinos

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What is a Boson?

In quantum mechanics, a boson is a particle that follows Bose–Einstein statistics. Bosons make up one of the two classes of particles, the other being fermions. The name boson was coined by Paul Dirac to commemorate the contribution of the Indian physicist Satyendra Nath Bose in developing

From playlist Science Unplugged: Particle Physics

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What is a Neutrino?

Neutrinos are the vampires of physics. Tweet it - http://bit.ly/sJgKV0 Facebook it - http://on.fb.me/rPfLOA minutephysics is now on Google+ - http://bit.ly/qzEwc6 And facebook - http://facebook.com/minutephysics And twitter - @minutephysics Minute Physics provides an energetic

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NOvA: Building a Next Generation Neutrino Experiment

The NOvA neutrino experiment is searching for the answers to some of the most fundamental questions of the universe. This video documents how collaboration between government research institutions like Fermilab, academia and industry can create one of the largest neutrino detectors in the

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What are Quarks?

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From playlist Science Unplugged: Particle Physics

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Colloqui della Classe di Scienze: Seeking the true nature of neutrinos: was Ettore Majorana right?

Marco Pallavicini (Università di Genova) - 22 settembre 2021 After almost 100 years since its birth, the neutrino is still the less understood particle of the Standard Model, the established theory of particles and fields. Neutrinos are the most abundant massive particles of the universe (

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Related pages

Borexino | Jiangmen Underground Neutrino Observatory | Sudbury Neutrino Observatory | Proton | Laboratori Nazionali del Gran Sasso | Neutrino detector | Baksan Neutrino Observatory | Neutrino | SNO+ | Solar neutrino unit | Kamioka Observatory | SNOLAB | Large Apparatus studying Grand Unification and Neutrino Astrophysics | Avogadro constant | Neutron | Positron