On the Coast – Families Issue 96 I October/November 2019 | Page 39
What’s going on?
by David Fletcher
O
n 12th July an interesting
story made its way into
the media worldwide. Scientists
at the ‘Icecube’ announced
they had detected a neutrino
particle and furthermore they
knew where in the Universe it
had originated. [1]
The Icecube Laboratory in 2012
Maryanne Sayers
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Let’s break this news apart -
What is a neutrino?
Known for his Exclusion Principle in
chemistry & quantum mechanics, it
was Wolfgang Pauli who first predicted
the existence of neutrinos, when it was
noticed there was some unexplained
energy missing in beta radiation.
Following the prediction in 1930, it
took 26 years before scientists in North
Carolina actually detected neutrinos in
1956. Although numerous, neutrinos
have no electrical charge, so they
rarely interact with ‘normal’ atoms. [2]
Where do neutrinos come from?
There are more than 100 trillion (don’t
try & count them!) neutrinos passing
through you right now. Produced in
these vast quantities by the fusion
process in our Sun, the overwhelming
majority of them pass straight through
the Earth. [3]
What is the Icecube?
Nearly 50 organizations collaborate
to run the experimental laboratory,
built in 2010, known as the Icecube
Neutrino Observatory. With detectors
located 1500m beneath the ice sheet
of Antarctica, the Icecube looks for
the tell-tale signs of cosmic particles
hitting the Earth. [1]
Credit: Martin Wolf, IceCube/NSF
www.icecube.wisc.edu/gallery/press/view/1336
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Satellite turned their instruments to
a small patch of sky and observed a
remarkable phenomenon known as a
Supermassive Spinning Black Hole. [1]
Why is this interesting?
Gamma radiation, the same ‘stuff’ used
in medical treatment along with x-rays,
is the highest energy radiation there
is. Gamma Ray Bursts are intermittent
events in the Universe that are not
well understood by Astro-Physicists.
Identifying a neutrino from a gamma
ray source is another step forward for
our cosmological theories. Not only
was this the first neutrino to have
its source identified from outside the
Solar System, but scientists estimate
the Black Hole causing the particles to
shoot across space in our direction is
4 billion light years away. By studying
these high energy events, scientists
hope to discover further information
which may unlock the mysteries of
Dark Matter & Dark Energy. What a
remarkable age in which we live! [4] [1]
Interested in reading more about the
Icecube? See https://icecube.wisc.edu/
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REFERENCES
The Detection
On 22nd September 2017 the
Icecube detected a neutrino with a
particularly high amount of energy.
After calculating the trajectory of this
incoming particle, an alert went out
to astronomers all over the world.
Telescopes in Hawaii, Chile, Japan
and even NASAs orbiting Gamma Ray
ttps://icecube.wisc.edu/news/view/586
h
(website visited 18-08-2018), University of
Wisconsin-Madison
[1]
Martin & Shaw 2012, Particle Physics, John
Wiley & Sons Ltd
[2]
Seeds & Backman 2011, Foundations of
Astronomy, Cengage Learning
[3]
Mian et al. 1987, International Journal of
Radiation Oncology Biology Physics Vol13
Issue12, Elsevier Inc.
[4]
David Fletcher is a 45 year old undergraduate of Physics at Macquarie University
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OCTOBER/NOVEMBER – ISSUE 96
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