How is it that Neutrinos are able to Pass through the Earth?

In summary, neutrinos are electrically neutral leptons that interact through the weak force and gravity. They are able to pass through matter without changing their path due to their lack of electric charge and weak interaction strength. Unlike electrons, which have electric charge and interact strongly, neutrinos are able to travel at nearly the speed of light without stopping. The possibility that the sum of the masses of the three types of neutrinos could account for the "missing mass" of the universe has been proposed, but its validity is still under debate and further calculations and research are needed to confirm this theory.
  • #1
dimensionless
462
1
Is there that much space in between all the electrons, protons, and neutron that this is likely? The only explanation that I can think of is that the neutrinos are in a different region of n-dimensional space-time and the fact that they pass through the Earth is merely a geometric illusion.

EDIT:

I should have tried wikipedia

Because it is an electrically neutral lepton, the neutrino interacts neither by way of the strong nor the electromagnetic force, but only through the weak force and gravity.
 
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  • #2
Your first description (atoms are mostly empty space) is the right explanation.
 
  • #3
An interesting aside from http://www.discover.com/issues/aug-01/cover/


Once you create a neutrino, a tiny subatomic particle, it moves at nearly the speed of light, and it doesn't stop. It keeps going in a straight line to the edge of the universe. Straight through any stars, planets, or mountains; straight through any atoms, nuclei, or other particles that happen to lie in its path. Straight through any people too: At this moment— let's say you're reading this at night, somewhere in the United States, relaxed in your living room— every second, 40 billion neutrinos from the sun are rocketing up your left nostril and through your brain's frontal lobe, on their way through the roof of your house and then clear out of the Milky Way galaxy, having already passed through China, Earth's rocky mantle, the seat of your recliner, and your left thigh. Even huger numbers of neutrinos pierce you from above; they come from stars in the night sky, from cosmic rays, and above all from the Big Bang— 15 billion years old, those neutrinos are, and still traveling.
 
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  • #4
pallidin said:
An interesting aside from — every second, 40 billion neutrino... 15.5 MeV Tau antineutrino mass < 15.5 MeV
 
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  • #5
Rade said:
Question. Since it is now known that the three different types of neutrinos have mass (see chart below), what is the possibility that the so-called "missing mass" of the universe is nothing more than the sum of the masses of the three types of neutrinos ? Has anyone done the calculations ?

Someone posted one that appeared today:

http://arxiv.org/abs/physics/0606208

Caveat: I have no idea of "valid" this is. So take this with a grain of salt and wait for it to appear in a peer-review journal.

Zz.
 
  • #6
I understood that neutrinos couldn't be dark matter because they are "hot", i.e. fast moving, and various observational constraints seemed to have ruled out hot dark matter.
 
  • #7
pallidin said:
Even huger numbers of neutrinos pierce you from above; they come from stars in the night sky, from cosmic rays, and above all from the Big Bang— 15 billion years old, those neutrinos are, and still traveling.
Doesn't this negate the thrust of your post? They come at us from every direction, and there is really no material difference if they come at us from above or from the other side of the earth, since they so rarely interact with matter, and pretty much all the neutrinos that come at us from the side of the universe under our feet just zip through the Earth and through us too.
 
  • #9
turbo-1 said:
Doesn't this negate the thrust of your post? They come at us from every direction, and there is really no material difference if they come at us from above or from the other side of the earth, since they so rarely interact with matter, and pretty much all the neutrinos that come at us from the side of the universe under our feet just zip through the Earth and through us too.

Not sure... it wasn't my writing. I think, however, that it was meant as a elementary conceptual(and obviously playful) distinction with regards to neutrinos emitted from our sun versus the totality from the universe in all directions.
Thus the intro is a "gentle-primer"; not meant for actual scientists which may demand a rigorous intro treatment, rather an intro which may entice the inquisitive "layman" reader to delve further into the article and subject matter. All is good.
 
  • #10
mathman said:
Your first description (atoms are mostly empty space) is the right explanation.

That's a whole lot of empty space. Does this not happen with electrons because their electrical charge changes the direction of their path?
 
  • #11
dimensionless said:
That's a whole lot of empty space. Does this not happen with electrons because their electrical charge changes the direction of their path?

It's funny, but physics has a whole lot of ways of answering this question that are valid. The reason is that there are many different ways of making the calculation and many different ways of interpreting it.

One way of describing it is that electric charge is carried by a particle, the photon, that is massless. Since it is massless, it obeys an inverse square law.

Neutrinos have no electric charge, they can only interact weakly. Now electrons interact weakly too, but it is very weak compared to their electric charge interactions.

When I say that the interactions are "weak" I really don't mean that, technically, their coupling constants are all that different. Instead, the weak force is weak only because the carrier for it, the W and Z particles are not massless, and in fact have pretty high masses.

Because they have masses, the weak force is unlikely to travel very far. The reason for it being "unlikely" is because the energy to create such a massive particle has to be borrowed and under the Heisenberg uncertainty principle, a high amount of energy is likely to be be borrowed for only a very short amount of time, and therefore is unlikely to travel very far.

Now that all said, if it were the case that a neutrino was very energetic, then it would be a lot easier to borrow the energy for that W or Z particle, and then the neutrino would be a lot more likely to interact. Because of this, the neutrino "cross section", or apparent size, increases as the energy of the neutrino increases.

In fact, with some of the very high energy particle accelerators that are planned, there is a possibility that the neutrinos themselves could cause enough radiation that this radiation would be dangerous to human life. Part of the reason for the high radiation levels is because the higher energy neutrinos are more likely to collide, and part of the reason is because when they do collide, being high energy, they cause a bigger particle shower.

For this reason, the designers of these bigger particle accelerators are taking this into account in designing these machines:
http://www.arxiv.org/abs/physics/9908017

The above article also talks about how neutrino cross sections increase with energy.

Carl
 
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1. How do neutrinos pass through the Earth?

Neutrinos are able to pass through the Earth due to their extremely small mass and lack of electric charge. This allows them to travel through matter without interacting with it.

2. What is the mechanism behind the ability of neutrinos to pass through the Earth?

The ability of neutrinos to pass through the Earth is due to the weak nuclear force, one of the four fundamental forces of nature. This force is responsible for interactions between subatomic particles, and it is much weaker than the other three forces (gravity, electromagnetism, and strong nuclear force).

3. How do neutrinos interact with matter?

Neutrinos only interact with matter through the weak nuclear force and gravity. They do not have any electric charge, so they do not interact with electromagnetic fields.

4. Is it possible for neutrinos to be stopped or blocked by any material?

Neutrinos can be stopped or blocked by extremely dense materials, such as lead or water, but it requires a very large amount of material. The majority of neutrinos that pass through the Earth are able to do so without any interaction.

5. Are there any practical applications for the ability of neutrinos to pass through the Earth?

Yes, the ability of neutrinos to pass through matter makes them useful for studying astrophysics and for detecting neutrinos from distant cosmic events. Neutrino detectors are also used in nuclear physics research and in medical imaging.

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