neutrino oscillation nguyen thanh phong yonsei univ., may 19, 2008

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Neutrino Oscillation Nguyen Thanh Phong Yonsei Univ., May 19, 2008

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Page 1: Neutrino Oscillation Nguyen Thanh Phong Yonsei Univ., May 19, 2008

Neutrino Oscillation

Nguyen Thanh Phong

Yonsei Univ., May 19, 2008

Page 2: Neutrino Oscillation Nguyen Thanh Phong Yonsei Univ., May 19, 2008

Outline

1. Brief History of the Neutrino

2. The evidence of the oscillations of neutrinos

3. Theory of neutrino oscillation

4. Summary

Page 3: Neutrino Oscillation Nguyen Thanh Phong Yonsei Univ., May 19, 2008

1. Brief History of the Neutrino

1) 1896: Henri Becquerel discovers natural radioactivity while studying phosphorescent properties of uranium salts.

rays: easy to absorb, hard to bend, positive charged, mono-energetic;

ray: harder to absorb, easy to bend, negative charge, spectrum?;

rays: no charge, very hard to absorb.

2) 1897: J.J. Thompson discovers the electron.

Page 4: Neutrino Oscillation Nguyen Thanh Phong Yonsei Univ., May 19, 2008

3)1911: Lise Meitner and Otto Hahn first shown that the energies of electrons mitted by beta decay had a continuous rather than discrete spectrum.

4) 1914: Chadwick presented definitive evidence for a continuous beta-ray spectrum.

F. A. Scott, Phys. Rev. 48, 391 (1935)

Instead ofdiscrete

spectra were continuous

Page 5: Neutrino Oscillation Nguyen Thanh Phong Yonsei Univ., May 19, 2008

Origin continuous -ray spectrum was unknown. Different options include several different energy loss mechanisms.

It took 15 years more to decide that the “real” beta-ray spectrum was really continuous. Reason for continuous spectrum was a total mystery:

+ QM: Spectra are discrete;

+ Energy-momentum conservation: N → N’ + e-

electron energy and momentum well defined

Page 6: Neutrino Oscillation Nguyen Thanh Phong Yonsei Univ., May 19, 2008

Nuclear physics before 1930: nucleus = nPP + nee-

Example: 4He = 4P +2e- work well.

However: 14N = 14P +7e- is expected to be a fermion, but it was experimentally known that is a boson!

There was also a problem with the magnetic moment of nuclei:

N, P e (=eh/4mc). How can the nuclear magnetic moment

be so much smaller than the electron one if the nucleus contains

electrons?

SOLUTION: bound, nuclear electrons are very weird!

+ This can also be used to solve the continuous -ray spectrum:

energy need not to be conserved in nuclear processes! (N. Bohr)

“…This would mean that the idea of energy and its conservation fails in dealing with processes involving the emission and capture of nuclear electrons. This does not sound improbable if we remember all that it has been said about peculiar properties of electrons in the nucleus.” (G. Gamow, 1931)

Page 7: Neutrino Oscillation Nguyen Thanh Phong Yonsei Univ., May 19, 2008

Enter the neutrino…

Weakly interacting massless neutral fermion

1930: Postulated by Pauli: the "neutron", a new spin 1/2 particle with small mass and no electric charge in order that: + resolve the problem of continuous beta-ray spectra, + reconcile nuclear model with spin-statistics theorem.

1932: Chadwick discovered the neutron.Chadwick’s neutron if different from Pauli’s neutron = neutrino (Fermi).

Page 8: Neutrino Oscillation Nguyen Thanh Phong Yonsei Univ., May 19, 2008

Adapted summary of an English translation to Pauli’s letter dated December 4, 1930

Page 9: Neutrino Oscillation Nguyen Thanh Phong Yonsei Univ., May 19, 2008

observing the unobservable…

1) 1956: “Discovery” of the electron neutrino (Reines and Cowan) in the Savannah River Nuclear Reactor site.

2) 1962, the second neutrino: e (Lederman, Steinberger, Schwarts at Brookhaven National Laboratory-BNL). First neutrino beam:

3) 2001: directly observed (DONUT experiment at FERMILAB. Same strategy:

Page 10: Neutrino Oscillation Nguyen Thanh Phong Yonsei Univ., May 19, 2008

2. The evidence of the oscillations of neutrinos

A. Solar neutrinos

B. Atmospheric neutrinos

C. Nuclear reactor neutrinos

Page 11: Neutrino Oscillation Nguyen Thanh Phong Yonsei Univ., May 19, 2008

A. Solar neutrinos

•How the Sun burns

Page 12: Neutrino Oscillation Nguyen Thanh Phong Yonsei Univ., May 19, 2008

Solar neutrino deficit is now understood as a consequence of neutrinos oscillation.

Page 13: Neutrino Oscillation Nguyen Thanh Phong Yonsei Univ., May 19, 2008

A. Atmospheric neutrinos

Atmosphere

Page 14: Neutrino Oscillation Nguyen Thanh Phong Yonsei Univ., May 19, 2008

(Sign of the particles are neglected in this figure.)

Page 15: Neutrino Oscillation Nguyen Thanh Phong Yonsei Univ., May 19, 2008
Page 16: Neutrino Oscillation Nguyen Thanh Phong Yonsei Univ., May 19, 2008

A half of lost !!

Page 17: Neutrino Oscillation Nguyen Thanh Phong Yonsei Univ., May 19, 2008

B. Nuclear reactor neutrinos

Reactor Long Baseline Experiment 150 - 210 km

( Epr > 2.6 MeV )

Page 18: Neutrino Oscillation Nguyen Thanh Phong Yonsei Univ., May 19, 2008
Page 19: Neutrino Oscillation Nguyen Thanh Phong Yonsei Univ., May 19, 2008

3. Theory of neutrino oscillation

A. Neutrino oscillation in vacuum

B. Neutrino oscillation in matter

Page 20: Neutrino Oscillation Nguyen Thanh Phong Yonsei Univ., May 19, 2008

Neutrinos come from at least three flavors

The known three flavors:

Each of these is associated with the corresponding charged-lepton flavor:

The meaning of this association

Page 21: Neutrino Oscillation Nguyen Thanh Phong Yonsei Univ., May 19, 2008

Over short distance, neutrinos do not change flavor:

Does not occur

But if neutrinos have masses, and leptons mix, neutrino flavor changes do occur during

long journeys

Page 22: Neutrino Oscillation Nguyen Thanh Phong Yonsei Univ., May 19, 2008

Let us assume neutrino have mass and leptons mix

When W+ decays:

The produced neutrino state |> is

Neutrino of flavor Neutrino of definite mass mi

Lepton mixing matrix

Page 23: Neutrino Oscillation Nguyen Thanh Phong Yonsei Univ., May 19, 2008

Another way to look at W boson decay

A given l+ can be accompanied by any i, and

The neutrino state |> produced together with l+ is

Page 24: Neutrino Oscillation Nguyen Thanh Phong Yonsei Univ., May 19, 2008

According to the Standard Model, extended toinclude neutrino mass and leptonic mixing

The number of different i is the same as thenumber of different l (3).

The mixing matrix U is 3 x 3 and unitary: UU† = U†U = 1

From |> = ΣiU*i|i> and the unitarity of U,

The flavor-α fraction of i is

Page 25: Neutrino Oscillation Nguyen Thanh Phong Yonsei Univ., May 19, 2008

Neutrino Flavor Change (Oscillation) in Vacuum

Page 26: Neutrino Oscillation Nguyen Thanh Phong Yonsei Univ., May 19, 2008

What is Propagator (i) Prop(i)?

|i,L = exp[ -i(Eit - piL)] |I,o

Neutrino sources are ~ constant in time.

Averaged over time of the interference

is

Unless E1 = E2

Only neutrino mass eigenstates with a commonenergy E are coherent.

Page 27: Neutrino Oscillation Nguyen Thanh Phong Yonsei Univ., May 19, 2008

For each mass eigenstate

|i,L = exp[-imi2L/2E)] |I,o

Page 28: Neutrino Oscillation Nguyen Thanh Phong Yonsei Univ., May 19, 2008

Probability for Neutrino Oscillation in Vacuum

Page 29: Neutrino Oscillation Nguyen Thanh Phong Yonsei Univ., May 19, 2008

For Antineutrinos: We assume the world is CPT invariant.

Page 30: Neutrino Oscillation Nguyen Thanh Phong Yonsei Univ., May 19, 2008

— Comments —

1. If all mi = 0, so that all Δmij2 = 0,

Flavor changes mass

2. If there is no mixing,

Flavor changes Mixing⇒

Page 31: Neutrino Oscillation Nguyen Thanh Phong Yonsei Univ., May 19, 2008

3. P ( → ) depends only on squared-masssplittings. Oscillation experiments cannot tell us

4. Neutrino flavor change does not change the total flux in a beam. It just redistributes it among flavors

Page 32: Neutrino Oscillation Nguyen Thanh Phong Yonsei Univ., May 19, 2008

When There are Only Two Flavorsand Two Mass Eigenstates

Page 33: Neutrino Oscillation Nguyen Thanh Phong Yonsei Univ., May 19, 2008

The oscillations of neutrinos in matter

Hamiltonian of a neutrino in a medium:

H = H0 + V, V = VNC + VCC const.*I + Ve

CC

(Up to small higher-order corrections)

Page 34: Neutrino Oscillation Nguyen Thanh Phong Yonsei Univ., May 19, 2008

2 oscillation in constant-density matter

Page 35: Neutrino Oscillation Nguyen Thanh Phong Yonsei Univ., May 19, 2008

— Comments —

1) Mikheyev - Smirnov - Wolfenstein (MSW) resonance:

2) For anti-neutrinos, VeCC changes sign, hence

there is no MSW resonance for anti-neutrinos

3) Matter effects induces the CP violation for 2 oscillation in a medium.

Page 36: Neutrino Oscillation Nguyen Thanh Phong Yonsei Univ., May 19, 2008

Summary

The history of neutrino is briefly introduced.

Some evidences of the oscillations of solar neutrino, atmospheric neutrino and nuclear reactor neutrino are shown.

The theory of neutrino oscillation in vacuum is derived. The interaction of neutrinos with medium is introduced, and 2-family neutrinos oscillation in constant density matter is considered. We see that the CP-violation can induced from the effect of matter which is absented in vacuum.