No sterile neutrinos after all, say MicroBooNE physicists
Since the 1990s, physicists have pondered the tantalizing possibility of an exotic fourth type of neutrino, dubbed the βsterileβ neutrino, that doesnβt interact with regular matter at all, apart from its fellow neutrinos, perhaps. But definitive experimental evidence for sterile neutrinos has remained elusive. Now it looks like the latest results from Fermilabβs MiniBooNE experiment have ruled out the sterile neutrino entirely, according to a paper published in the journal Nature.
How did the possibility of sterile neutrinos even become a thing? It all dates back to the so-called βsolar neutrino problem.β Physicists detected the first solar neutrinos from the Sun in 1966. The only problem was that there were far fewer solar neutrinos being detected than predicted by theory, a conundrum that became known as the solar neutrino problem. In 1962, physicists discovered a second type (βflavorβ) of neutrino, the muon neutrino. This was followed byΒ the discovery of a third flavor, the tau neutrino, in 2000.
Physicists already suspected that neutrinos might be able to switch from one flavor to another. In 2002, scientists at theΒ Sudbury Neutrino Observatory (or SNO) announced that they had solved the solar neutrino problem. The missing solar (electron) neutrinos were just in disguise, having changed into a different flavor on the long journey between the Sun and the Earth. If neutrinos oscillate, then they must have a teensy bit of mass after all. That posed another knotty neutrino-related problem. There are three neutrino flavors, but none of them has a well-defined mass. Rather, different kinds of βmass statesβ mix together in various ways to produce electron, muon, and tau neutrinos. Thatβs quantum weirdness for you.


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