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Date: 29 November 2002
Subject: Physics
There's weird, very weird, and then there's physics!
Half the Nobel prize for physics for 2002 went jointly to Raymond
Davies Jnr formerly of the Brookhaven National Laboratory and Masatoshi
Koshiba of Tokyo University for work on Neutrinos.
The history of theory and work on neutrinos is one of the most
fascinating in physics. It reflects basic ways in which actual science
differs greatly from some of the popular misconceptions of it as a 'purely
observational' activity where all one needs is a lack of preconception.
The story begins soon after the new 'uncertainty principle' physics of
1928, in which the physicist, as Sir Arthur Eddington wrote, "no longer
borrowed the raw material of his world from the familiar world." Concepts
in physics were no longer expected to be "even explicable in terms of
common experience". (The Nature of the Physical World, 1928).
On 4th December 1930 Physics Professor Wolfgang Pauli (1900-58) wrote
of his theories on beta-decay in radium:
I have hit upon a desperate remedy to save the "exchange theorem" of
statistics and the law of conservation of energy. Namely, the
possibility that there could exist in the nuclei electrically neutral
particles, that I wish to call neutrons, which have spin 1/2 and obey
the exclusion principle and which further differ from light quanta in
that they do not travel with the velocity of light. The mass of the
neutrons should be of the same order of magnitude as the electron mass
and in any event not larger than 0.01 proton masses. The continuous beta
spectrum would then become understandable...
Pauli was a scientific genius, proposed in 1945 by Einstein for his
Nobel Prize - but he spent much time in the last 15 years of his life
exploring the philosophy and history of science, and its relationship with
religion. Like Einstein, Planck, Eddington, and so many other 20th century
physicists, he was by no means dismissive of religion. The popular image
of the "hard-nosed" physicist is as mistaken for the 20th as for earlier
centuries where most pioneers in physics were unusually religious.
It was Fermi who, in 1934, proposed the name "neutrino" for this
mysterious particle, by then believed to have a mass much lower than the
electron and invented basically to preserve the law of conservation of
mass-energy from apparent refutation. By then it was also recognised that
the particle reacted so weakly with matter that it could pass right
through the earth without effect.
So how to demonstrate it experimentally?
Fredrick Reines was a professor of physics who in the 1950's was
looking for evidence of neutrino emission from nuclear reactors. The
anti-neutrino coming from the nuclear reactor interacts with a proton of
the target matter (a large tank of water and cadmium chloride), giving a
positron and a neutron, In 1956, at the new Savannah River reactor in
South Carolina, the electron antineutrino was detected. Reines continued
work on the particle, and still led the team that in 1987 detected
neutrinos emitted from Supernova SN1987A demonstrating conclusively for
the first time the theoretically postulated role of the neutrino in
stellar collapse. Reines received a half Nobel Prize "for work on the
neutrino" in 1995.
Meantime, however, interest mounted in the possible emission of
neutrinos by the sun. Ray Davis had been working on neutrinos since the
1950's, and from 1964-68 organised construction of a tank containing
100,000 gallons of perchloroethylene (cleaning fluid!) 3-4000 underground
in Homestake mine. The confirmed 1969 results showed about a 3x lower rate
of solar neutrino emission than expected from theory - though theory and
observation continued to interact.
Masatoshi Koshiba and his team constructed the Kamiokande detector - a
huge tank filled with pure water deep underground in Japan. When neutrinos
pass through this tank, they may interact with atomic nuclei in the water.
This reaction leads to the release of an electron, creating small flashes
of light Photomultipliers surrounding the tank capture these flashes.
Unlike Davis's, Koshiba's experiments could register the time and
direction of events - proving definitely that neutrinos came from the Sun.
In 1995 a bigger "Super-Kamiokande" tank was built, and in June 1998 this
demonstrated oscillation in atmospheric neutrinos, showing that actually
neutrinos have non-zero mass.
For Christians the continuing neutrino story is fascinating for several
reasons. Firstly, it shows that science is far from a simple process of
generalising from observation. Neutrino work has involved a complex
interaction of theory and experiment - each affecting the other. Neutrino
work also has odd implications for the meaning of "observation" - it would
not occur to most people that the best way to examine the inside of the
sun was to go down a mine! A second implication, then, is that the heart
of matter in our universe contains a number of mysterious and far from
"common sense" concepts. This is not obscurantism or any kind of
anti-science, but as someone who works in a university department of
physics astronomy and mathematics, I have been known to remark to
colleagues that after struggling with comprehending some of the
(non-mathematical) concepts in modern physics, believing in the trinity is
a doddle. All credit to those who can achieve Nobel prizes in any such
area!
NB: Some pictures courtesy of Kamioka Observatory, ICRR and
Brookhaven National Laboratory
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