Scientists find new results pertaining to measurement of subatomic particles

By ANI | Published: January 23, 2020 08:12 PM2020-01-23T20:12:42+5:302020-01-24T12:03:24+5:30

Scientists at Borexino collaboration have produced new results pertaining to the measurement of subatomic particles known as geoneutrinos emanating from the Earth's interior.

Scientists find new results pertaining to measurement of subatomic particles | Scientists find new results pertaining to measurement of subatomic particles

Scientists find new results pertaining to measurement of subatomic particles

Scientists at Borexino collaboration have produced new results pertaining to the measurement of subatomic particles known as geoneutrinos emanating from the Earth's interior.

With this update, the researchers have now been able to access 53 events - almost twice as many as in the previous analysis of the data from the Borexino geoneutrino detector, which is located 1,400 metres below the Earth's surface in the Gran Sasso massif near Rome.

Geoneutrinos originate from the depths of our planet and are capable of moving effortlessly through matter at speeds nearing that of light. The elusive "ghost particles" rarely interact with matter, making their detection difficult.

The results provide an exclusive insight into processes and conditions in the earth's interior that remain puzzling to this day.

The earth is shining, even if it is not at all visible to the naked eye. The reason for this is geoneutrinos, which are produced in radioactive decay processes in the interior of the Earth. Every second, about one million of these elusive particles penetrate every square centimetre of our planet's surface.

The Borexino detector, located in the world's largest underground laboratory, the Laboratori Nazionali del Gran Sasso in Italy, is one of the few detectors in the world capable of observing these ghostly particles.

Researchers have been using it to collect data on neutrinos since 2007. By 2019, they were able to register twice as many events as at the time of the last analysis in 2015 - and reduced the uncertainty of the measurements from 27 to 18 per cent, which is also due to new analysis methods.

"Geoneutrinos are the only direct traces of the radioactive decays that occur inside the Earth, and which produce an as yet unknown portion of the energy driving all the dynamics of our planet," explains Livia Ludhova, one of the two current scientific coordinators of Borexino and head of the neutrino group at the Nuclear Physics Institute (IKP) at Forschungszentrum Julich.

The researchers in the Borexino collaboration have extracted with an improved statistical significance the signal of geoneutrinos coming from the Earth's mantle which lies below the Earth's crust, by exploiting the well-known contribution from the Earth's uppermost mantle and crust -- the so-called lithosphere.

The intense magnetic field, the unceasing volcc activity, the movement of the tectonic plates, and mantle convection: The conditions inside the Earth are in many ways unique in the entire solar system. Scientists have been discussing the question of where the Earth's internal heat comes from for over 200 years.

"The hypothesis that there is no longer any radioactivity at depth in the mantle can now be excluded at 99 per cent confidence level for the first time. This makes it possible to establish lower limits for urum and thorium abundances in the Earth's mantle," says Livia Ludhova.

These values are of interest to many different Earth model calculations. For example, it is highly probable (85 per cent) that radioactive decay processes inside the Earth generate more than half of the Earth's internal heat, while the other half is still largely derived from the original formation of the Earth.

Radioactive processes in the Earth, therefore, provide a non-negligible portion of the energy that feeds volcanoes, earthquakes, and the Earth's magnetic field.

The latest research mot only presents the new results but also explains the analysis in a comprehensive way from the perspectives of both physics and geology, which will be helpful in creating next-generation geoneutrino detectors.

( With inputs from ANI )

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