Neutrino oscillations

prefLabel
  • Neutrino oscillations
inScheme
broader
Abstract from DBPedia
    Neutrino oscillation is a quantum mechanical phenomenon in which a neutrino created with a specific lepton family number ("lepton flavor": electron, muon, or tau) can later be measured to have a different lepton family number. The probability of measuring a particular flavor for a neutrino varies between three known states, as it propagates through space. First predicted by Bruno Pontecorvo in 1957, neutrino oscillation has since been observed by a multitude of experiments in several different contexts. Most notably, the existence of neutrino oscillation resolved the long-standing solar neutrino problem. Neutrino oscillation is of great theoretical and experimental interest, as the precise properties of the process can shed light on several properties of the neutrino. In particular, it implies that the neutrino has a non-zero mass, which requires a modification to the Standard Model of particle physics. The experimental discovery of neutrino oscillation, and thus neutrino mass, by the Super-Kamiokande Observatory and the Sudbury Neutrino Observatories was recognized with the 2015 Nobel Prize for Physics.

    ニュートリノ振動(ニュートリノしんどう、英: neutrino oscillation)は、生成時に決定されたニュートリノのフレーバー(電子、ミューオン、タウ粒子のいずれか)が、後に別のフレーバーとして観測される素粒子物理学での現象。その存在確率はニュートリノが伝搬していく過程で周期的に変化(すなわち振動)する。これはニュートリノが質量を持つことにより起きるとされ、素粒子物理学の標準模型では説明できない。

    (Source: http://dbpedia.org/resource/Neutrino_oscillation)