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by credit_guy
2193 days ago
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Isn't this image a bit circular then (pardon the pun)? The "hot" pixels in the middle represent the electrons with a direction perfectly aligned with the direction to the Sun, while the cool-blueish outside pixels are a representation of the electrons traveling at an angle? Circular in the sense that you know where the Sun is, and are looking in that direction, and the electron trails are just confirming that. 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"? |
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All that being said, the specific shape of the "sun" in the image is influenced by many factors many of which are related to the detection mechanism and the detector itself...and don't tell you that much about the sun. Eventually (one hopes), detectors will improve to the point where the "shape" information of the image is reliable enough to extract interesting solar physics measurements from it.
P.S your fun thought on the detection of a fusion reactor is extremely on point. There exists a under-construction experiment in the UK called "Watchman" that hopes to detect a neutrino signature from a nuclear power plant being shut off and then being used to produce material for a nuclear weapon. The idea would be that you could observe activities of nuclear facilities in a "rouge nation". See here https://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/27/science/nuclear-bombs-ant... or here http://svoboda.ucdavis.edu/experiments/watchman/