• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Using A Forest As A Massive Neutrino Detector? A Physicist Thinks It Might Be Possible

March 7, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

Neutrinos are a bit like the Force in Star Wars. These “ghost particles” surround us and penetrate us but don’t interact with the forces that bind the galaxy together. The reason they can go through not just us but the entire planet without problem is because they are extremely light in mass and have no charge. This also makes them extremely difficult to observe and study. A physicist has a bold new proposal: let’s use Earth’s forests to detect some of them.

This might seem completely outlandish, but neutrino detectors tend to be. For example, Superkamiokande in Japan is a large hollow structure filled with purified water. The walls of the container are covered in detectors that can record the very rare interactions between a neutrino and an atom.

Advertisement

The IceCube Neutrino Observatory, based in Antarctica. is looking to detect similar collisions but instead of using liquid water, it uses one cubic kilometer of ice, with the detectors placed inside the ice. China is planning to build the world’s largest detector directly under the sea.

All those detectors expect to see a flash of light when the neutrino slams into an atom. The tree approach is something different. It’s based on the fact that the tau neutrino is the heavier version of these particles. When this neutrino interacts with our planet, it produces a tau particle – a heavy version of the electron. This particle decays into a shower of other charged particles and this shower emits radio waves.

Researchers interested in observing these events in the air have been using radio antennae to capture these signals. But the antennae need to be away from cities (and other human-made interferences), ideally on higher grounds like hills or slopes. Many locations with those characteristics feature trees, so building an array of antennae would require finding a place that is barren too. In a new preprint (yet to be peer-reviewed), Steven Prohira, an assistant professor in physics and astronomy at the University of Kansas, considers if we could just use the trees instead.

There is evidence – first collected at the beginning of the last century with follow-ups in the mid-to-late 1900s – that trees are pretty good radio antennas. By wrapping a coil around a tree or nailing a wire to it and then connecting it to electronics, a forest could work as a full array.

Advertisement

Now, there are a bunch of challenges and uncertainties surrounding turning Earth’s forests into enormous neutrino detectors. It’s not clear how well the trees fare in detecting the range of radio waves produced by these events, for a start. But if they can record the subtleties of these events that could allow us to track their origins.

There are also deployment complications. Differences in tree differences might affect performance, as might seasons if leaves affect observations. Power for the array might also be complicated to get in the middle of a forest (not with the new energy from space approach, though). Still, Prohira is confident investigating this possibility is worth it, as long as it is done in a way that doesn’t harm nature.

“Using trees as the antennas for a full-scale array has numerous benefits, including the complete removal of the need for designing and deploying antennas,” he writes. “The author urges that, should this idea be tested or implemented, the experimenters take the utmost care in protecting and maintaining the forest they instrument, and not do damage to this precious and fragile resource shared by all the creatures of the Earth. Such a detector must be built in harmony with, and with respect for, nature; otherwise, this idea is not worth trying.”

The paper is available in the preprint online repository ArXiv.   

Advertisement

[H/T: Science News]

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Soccer – FIFA backs down on threat to fine Premier clubs who play South American players
  2. U.S. House passes abortion rights bill, outlook poor in Senate
  3. UBS clients raise $650 million for biggest yet biotech impact fund
  4. We’ve Breached Six Of The Nine “Planetary Boundaries” For Sustaining Human Civilization

Source Link: Using A Forest As A Massive Neutrino Detector? A Physicist Thinks It Might Be Possible

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • New Nightmare Fuel Unlocked: Watch The First Known Capture Of A Shrew By A False Widow Spider
  • Peculiar Glow In The Milky Way Might Be Dark Matter Signature
  • “I Was Scared To Death”: Missouri’s Great Cobra Scare Of 1953 Was Eventually Solved After 35 Years
  • Two Spacecraft To Fly Through Comet 3I/ATLAS’s Ion Tail – Will They Be Able To Catch Something?
  • Pioneering Heavy Water Detection Suggests Earth’s Water Might Be Older Than The Sun
  • PhD Students’ Groundbreaking New Technique Rescues JWST’s Highest Resolution Data
  • Popcorn-Like Parasites And Weird Worms Among 14 New Species Discovered In The World’s Oceans
  • Poem From 1181 CE Cairo Appears To Reference A Rare Galactic Supernova
  • With “Iridescent Live Colors”, Newly Discovered Beautiful Dwarfgoby Lives Up To Its Name (Mostly)
  • “Anti-Tail” And Odd 594-Kilometer Feature Found On Interstellar Object 3I/ATLAS By Keck Observatory
  • Why Do We Call It A “Hamburger” When It Doesn’t Contain Ham?
  • What Aristotle Got Wrong About The Octopus
  • The World’s Largest Island Is Shrinking And Shifting
  • Record-Breaking Marshmallow Planet – It’s A Cold, Peculiar World On A Very Slanted Orbit
  • Distinctive Rocks Might Be Remnants Of Earth Before The Collision That Made The Moon
  • Bright Northern Lights Across America Expected This Week As 3 Coronal Mass Ejections Fly Towards Earth
  • Brain Implant Enables Paralyzed Man To Feel And Use Objects Using Someone Else’s Hands
  • “This Is A Really Big Deal”: Brain Training Significantly Improves Key Neurochemical Levels In World First
  • “Wholly Unexpected”: First-Ever Fossil Paranthropus Hand Raises Questions About Earliest Tool Makers’ Identity
  • For Centuries, Nobody Knew Why Swiss Cheese Has Holes. Then, The Mystery Was Solved.
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version