With neutrinos, scientists observe our galaxy in a whole new way
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[June 30, 2023]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Human beings for millennia have gazed with awe at
the vast torrent of stars - bright and dim - shining in Earth's night
sky that comprise the Milky Way. Our home galaxy, however, is now being
observed for the first time in a brand new way.
Scientists said on Thursday they have produced an image of the Milky Way
not based on electromagnetic radiation - light - but on ghostly
subatomic particles called neutrinos. They detected high-energy
neutrinos in pristine ice deep below Antarctica's surface, then traced
their source back to locations in the Milky Way - the first time these
particles have been observed arising from our galaxy.
This view differs fundamentally from what we can see with our own eyes
or with instruments that measure other electromagnetic sources like
radio waves, microwaves, infrared, ultraviolet, X-rays and gamma-rays.
It is not stars and planets and other stuff observable thanks to their
light, but rather the mysterious sources of neutrinos originating in the
galaxy, perhaps remnants of explosive star deaths called supernovas.
The neutrinos were detected over a span of a decade at the IceCube
Neutrino Observatory at a U.S. scientific research station at the South
Pole, using more than 5,000 sensors covering an area the size of a small
mountain.
"This observation is ground-breaking. It established the galaxy as a
neutrino source. Every future work will refer to this observation," said
Georgia Tech physicist Ignacio Taboada, spokesperson for the IceCube
research.
"When we discovered neutrinos of cosmic origin in 2013, it was somewhat
of a surprise to us that we did not find a flux that originated in the
nearby sources of our own galaxy. Galactic sources were supposed to
dominate the sky, as they do in all wavelengths of light. It took us a
decade to discover our own galaxy," said University of Wisconsin
physicist and IceCube lead scientist Francis Halzen.
Neutrinos are electrically neutral, undisturbed by even the strongest
magnetic field, and rarely interact with matter, earning the nickname
"ghost particle." As neutrinos travel through space, they pass unimpeded
through matter - stars, planets and, for that matter, people.
"Just as light goes without stopping through glass, neutrinos can go
through everything, including the whole planet Earth," Taboada said.
"The neutrino is an elementary particle, meaning they are not made up of
anything smaller. They are not the building blocks of 'stuff,' like
electrons and quarks are, but they are created in nuclear processes.
They are also created when protons (subatomic particles) and (atomic)
nuclei interact at very high energies," said physicist Naoko Kurahashi
Neilson of Drexel University in Philadelphia, a member of the research
team that detailed the findings in the journal Science.
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A view of the IceCube Lab at the South
Pole with a starry sky above, with a headlamp light shining into the
sky, is seen in this undated handout image. Marc Jacquart, IceCube/NSF/Handout
via REUTERS
Many aspects of the universe are indecipherable using light alone.
The ability to use particles like neutrinos in astronomy enables a
more robust examination, much as the confirmation of ripples in the
fabric of space-time called gravitational waves, announced in 2016,
opened another new frontier. This field is called "multi-messenger
astrophysics."
Neutrinos are produced by the same sources as cosmic rays, the
highest-energy particles ever observed, but differ in a key respect.
Cosmic rays, as electrically charged particles, cannot be traced
straight back to their source because strong magnetic fields in
space alter their trajectory. The direction from which neutrinos
arrive points directly back to their original source.
The researchers harnessed machine learning to help distinguish
neutrinos originating in our galaxy from those originating
elsewhere. They released an illustration of their findings with
neutrinos from the Milky Way represented by light, with a heavy
concentration at the galaxy's core.
How the neutrinos originated is a matter of debate. The observations
were consistent with the idea of a diffuse emission of neutrinos in
the Milky Way, but these particles could arise from specific
yet-unknown sources.
"This is now the key question. Neutrinos only originate in sources
where cosmic rays are produced. They are tracers of cosmic ray
sources. The key question is where these cosmic rays originate,"
Halzen said.
"The most likely source of neutrinos and cosmic rays in our galaxy,"
Taboada added, "are the remains of past supernova explosions. But
this is unproven so far."
(Reporting by Will Dunham, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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