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by 0PingWithJesus
2192 days ago
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The process behind this measurement is that the neutrino hits an electron in the detector. That electron will (with relatively high likelihood) travel in the same direction as the incident neutrino. The Cherenkov radiation produced by the electron is emitted in a cone shape along the direction of travel. The photo-detectors observe the Cherenkov light and through some well tuned algorithms the electrons direction is "reconstructed". Super-K has no doubt spent significant effort improving & evaluating their reconstruction algorithms. Once you have the reconstructed electron direction there's almost no hope that you can reconstruct the incident neutrino direction...but that's generally okay, b/c you can usually just assume the neutrino traveled exactly parallel to the electron (i.e. directly away from the sun). But that's sometimes wrong which is (partly) why you see a lot of "fuzz" around the solar core in the image. |
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Is this image telling us anything new? Can this method be used for any type of observation? Or it simply serve as observation in the opposite direction: knowing where the neutrinos come from, you can infer in what cone the bounced electrons can move?
A fun thought: if one day, a secret organization starts running an undisclosed nuclear fusion reactor, will it show up on this "photo"?