|
KamLAND Websites with additional images can
be accessed at http://hep.stanford.edu/neutrino/KamLAND/KamLAND.html
The Japanese KamLAND Website can be accessed at: http://www.awa.tohoku.ac.jp/html/KamLAND/.
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - Results from the first six months of
experiments at KamLAND, an underground neutrino detector in
central Japan, show that anti-neutrinos emanating from nearby
nuclear reactors are “disappearing,” which indicates they
have mass and can oscillate, or change, from one type to
another.
The University of Alabama has two faculty members, a
post-doctoral research associate and several graduate students
involved in the international project.
Neutrinos are subatomic particles that interact so rarely
with other matter that one could pass untouched through a wall
of lead stretching from the earth to the moon. They are produced
during nuclear fusion, the reaction that lights the sun and
other stars. Anti-neutrinos are created in fission reactions
such as those that drive nuclear power plants.
It is hoped that this research will one day be able to help
unlock the secrets about the fundamental nature of matter, how
the sun works, the composition and evolution of the Earth, the
process of star collapse and the origin and future of the
universe.
In a paper for Physical Review Letters, the 92 physicists
from Japan, the United States and China, who make up the KamLAND
collaboration, report that during 145 days of operation, they
recorded 54 electron anti-neutrino events in the energy range of
one to 10 million electron volts, as opposed to the
approximately 86 events predicted by the Standard Model under
the assumption that no oscillations occur.
Anti-neutrinos are the anti-matter counterpart to neutrinos.
These results, obtained using well-understood, man-made
anti-neutrino sources, provide independent confirmation of
earlier studies involving solar neutrinos and show that the
Standard Model of Particle Physics, which has successfully
explained fundamental physics since the 1970’s, is in need of
updating.
The results also point the way to the first direct
measurements of the total radioactivity of the earth.
University of Alabama researchers have been involved in the
KamLAND project since the beginning of its construction in 1998.
“This research has put another piece of the puzzle in
place,” said Dr. Jerrry Busenitz, professor of physics at The
University of Alabama. “KamLAND has provided an important
confirmation that neutrinos do in fact oscillate.”
“There have been a wide range of hypotheses on this
subject, and neutrino research is scientifically popular right
now,” said Dr. Andreas Piepke, professor of physics at The
University of Alabama. “The results of our research are strong
evidence that we are well on the way to a full understanding of
neutrinos.”
KamLAND stands for Kamioka Liquid scintillator Anti-Neutrino
Detector. Located in a mine cavern beneath the mountains of
Japan’s main island of Honshu, near the city of Toyama, it is
the largest low-energy anti-neutrino detector ever built. The
detector consists of a 13 meter (43 feet) in diameter weather
balloon filled with about a kiloton of liquid scintillator, a
chemical soup that emits flashes of light when an incoming
anti-neutrino collides with a proton.
These light flashes are detected by a surrounding array of
1,879 photomultiplier light sensors, which convert the flashes
into electronic signals that computers can analyze. The
photomultipliers are attached to the inner surface of an
18-meter in diameter stainless steel sphere and separated from
the weather balloon by a buffering bath of inert oil and water,
which helps suppress interference from background radiation.
The anti-neutrino events that were recorded in the KamLAND
detector for this study stem from electron anti-neutrinos that
originated from the 51 nuclear reactors in Japan plus 18
reactors in South Korea. Anti-neutrinos, like neutrinos, come in
three different types or “flavors,” electron, muon and tau.
According to the predictions from the Standard Model,
neutrinos/anti-neutrinos are without mass. Contrary to this,
over the past years, neutrino experiments implied that the
ghost-like snippets of matter do possess mass, enabling them to
oscillate and change flavor over a distance. KamLAND’s results
are compatible with earlier results and were obtained using a
complementary approach.
Construction of the KamLAND detector began in 1998 and
operations began in January of 2002.
Japan’s Ministry of Education, Science, Sports, and Culture
provided more than $20 million of KamLAND’s construction
costs. The U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Science
provided nearly $6 million.
The KamLAND experiments will continue for several more years,
making refined measurements of reactor neutrinos that should
shed more light on neutrino mass and flavor mixing. Since
anti-neutrinos also are produced during the decay of radioactive
uranium and thorium in the crust and mantle of the Earth, the
KamLAND detector can also be used to measure our planet’s
internal radioactivity.
KamLAND, with a more purified liquid scintillator, will also
be used to study solar neutrinos in a new low energy regime. For
now, the evidence of neutrino oscillations and flavor has been
firmly established.
The KamLAND neutrino experiments are being conducted by an
international collaboration largely comprised of scientists from
Japan and the United States. The U.S. team at KamLAND includes
researchers from The University of Alabama, the University of
California Berkeley, Stanford University, the California
Institute of Technology, Drexel University, the University of
Hawaii, Louisiana State University, the University of New
Mexico, the University of Tennessee, Duke University, the
University of North Carolina and North Carolina State
University.
The Japanese team at KamLAND is led by Atsuto Suzuki, a
professor of physics at the Research Center for Neutrino Science
at Tohuku University. Suzuki is the overall head of the
international collaboration, which also includes, in addition to
Tohuku University participants, researchers from the Institute
of High Energy Physics in Beijing.
|