Understanding Neutrino Oscillation and Mixing | Explained for Beginners

In summary: The interference is observed as oscillation.In summary, Neutrino mixing happens because the neutrino flavors are determined by the states that interact via a W with a particular charged lepton, while their masses are determined by their propagation through space. This results in a mismatch between flavor and mass eigenstates, which is rotated by a mixing matrix. The difference between neutrino oscillation and quark mixing is that neutrinos have a much smaller mass and velocity difference, leading to longer interference and oscillation.
  • #1
aveline de grandpre
10
1
If we have a beta decay where a solar neutrino is produced:
a proton converts into a neutron ,emitting a W. the W decays into an anti electron and a neutrino.
So in the end of the chain we have a neutrino that will travel through space and oscillate.
Neutrino Oscillation happens because of Neutrino mixing. but what is the difference between them?
and how neutrino mixing happens exactly here? Is the neutrino required to emit a W Boson like quarks do?



I'm new to the concept of Neutrinos, I'm really trying to understand how neutrino mixing happens.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #2
Neutrino mixing happens much in the same way as quark mixing. The big difference being that the quarks we generally talk about are defined according to their mass eigenstates and the neutrino flavours are determined by the states that interact via a W with a particular charged lepton. The mixing is a mismatch between the mass and flavour eigenstates and the mixing matrix rotate them into each other.

In other words, the electron neutrino is not a mass eigenstate, it is a linear combination of mass eigenstates.

Also note that the majority of the solar neutrinos are produced by the pp process, which is not a beta decay.
 
  • #3
aveline de grandpre said:
If we have a beta decay where a solar neutrino is produced:
a proton converts into a neutron ,emitting a W. the W decays into an anti electron and a neutrino.
So in the end of the chain we have a neutrino that will travel through space and oscillate.
Neutrino Oscillation happens because of Neutrino mixing. but what is the difference between them?
and how neutrino mixing happens exactly here?

In general, we detect particles by having them interact with other particles in our detectors.

When we observe particles using their weak interaction (which is always true for neutrinos), we observe their _flavor_. However, when particles propagate through space, they do so according to their _mass_ (velocity depends on it).

Surprisingly for our macro-world intuition, those things are not the same: electron neutrino has no definite mass (it's a "mix of three different states each with different mass"); and similarly, least massive neutrino (call it v1) has no definite flavor (it's a "mix of three different flavor states").

When, say, electron neutrino is produced, it CANT travel through space as pure electron neutrino. It's impossible. It travels through space as a "mix of three different states each with different mass". But different massive particles with the same momentum have different velocities. So these three waves travel with different velocities, and therefore interference happens: at different points along the trajectory, each component has different amplitude. That's "oscillation".

The same thing happens with other weakly-interacting particles, such as quarks:
When an up-type quark is produced via weak interaction, it travels through space as a "mix of three different states each with different mass". But quark masses are large, velocities are sufficiently different, and very soon after creation its different mass components drift apart along the trajectory so that their wavefunctions no longer overlap and no longer interfere. Thus you arrive at a more intuitively understandable picture: "its an u-quark with probability N%, c-quark with probability M%, or t-quark with probability (100-N-M)% (regardless of position on the trajectory)".

For neutrinos, masses are tiny and velocities are always very, very close to c and even closer to each other. Thus three mass components propagate almost on top of each other, very slowly drifting apart, with wavefunctions overlapping and interfering for a long time.
 

1. What is neutrino oscillation?

Neutrino oscillation is a phenomenon where neutrinos, which are elementary particles, change from one type to another as they travel through space.

2. How do neutrinos oscillate?

Neutrinos oscillate due to a property called flavor mixing, where they are created in a specific flavor (electron, muon, or tau) and can later be detected in a different flavor.

3. Why is neutrino oscillation important?

Neutrino oscillation is important because it helps us understand the nature of neutrinos and their properties, such as their mass and interaction with other particles. It also has implications for the Standard Model of particle physics and can provide insights into the early universe.

4. What experiments have been conducted to study neutrino oscillation?

Several experiments, such as the Super-Kamiokande and IceCube experiments, have been conducted to study neutrino oscillation. These experiments use large detectors to observe neutrinos emitted from various sources, such as the sun or cosmic rays.

5. How does neutrino oscillation impact our understanding of the universe?

Neutrino oscillation has had a significant impact on our understanding of the universe by confirming that neutrinos have mass and can change between different flavors. This has implications for cosmology, such as the evolution of the universe and the formation of galaxies.

Similar threads

  • High Energy, Nuclear, Particle Physics
Replies
33
Views
2K
  • High Energy, Nuclear, Particle Physics
Replies
32
Views
2K
  • High Energy, Nuclear, Particle Physics
Replies
3
Views
2K
  • High Energy, Nuclear, Particle Physics
Replies
3
Views
1K
  • High Energy, Nuclear, Particle Physics
Replies
4
Views
2K
  • High Energy, Nuclear, Particle Physics
Replies
3
Views
2K
  • High Energy, Nuclear, Particle Physics
Replies
8
Views
1K
  • High Energy, Nuclear, Particle Physics
Replies
5
Views
2K
  • High Energy, Nuclear, Particle Physics
Replies
4
Views
2K
  • High Energy, Nuclear, Particle Physics
Replies
4
Views
1K
Back
Top