Topic of the Week

US/Central
Sunrise - WH11NE (Fermilab)

Sunrise - WH11NE

Fermilab

Christian Herwig (Fermi National Accelerator Lab. (US)), Yuri Gershtein (Rutgers State Univ. of New Jersey (US))
    • 15:00 16:00
      Let There be Light: unlocking the secrets of the Universe with neutrinos 1h

      Neutrinos are some of the most fascinating particles that occur in nature. Over one billion times lighter than the proton, the neutrino was once thought to be massless and to travel at the speed of light. The Nobel-Prize winning discovery of neutrino oscillations told us that neutrinos have non-zero mass, which opens up the unique possibility of the neutrino being its own antiparticle, known as a Majorana fermion. This property could help explain the dominance of matter in our Universe. This talk will discuss the different experimental approaches for using light to observe neutrinos, and the physics thus enabled: from directional Cherenkov detectors like the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory, to its successor experiment, SNO+, which uses scintillation to probe low-energy interactions. We will then discuss technological advances that could enable a new kind of large-scale neutrino experiment, capable of combining both signals to achieve unprecedented physics reach.

      Speakers: Gabriel Orebi Gann (University of California, Berkeley & Lawrence Berkeley National), Gabriel Orebi Gann (UC Berkeley / LBNL)