Best Precision Yet for Neutrino Measurements at Daya Bay


By Tracking the Transformation of Neutrinos, Scientists Hope to Answer Fundamental Physics Questions

In the Daya Bay region of China, about 55 kilometers northeast of Hong Kong, a research project is underway to study ghostlike, elusive particles called neutrinos. On September 11, the international Daya Bay Collaboration announced new findings on the measurements of neutrinos, paving the way forward for further neutrino research, and confirming that the Daya Bay neutrino experiment continues to be one to watch.

Antineutrino Detectors
These are antineutrino detectors installed in the far hall of the Daya Bay experiment. Credit: Qiang Xiao
The latest findings involve measurements that track the way neutrinos change types or flavors, as they move, a characteristic called neutrino oscillation. By measuring neutrino oscillation, the researchers can home in on two key neutrino properties: their “mixing angle” and “mass splitting.”

Measurements of these properties by the Daya Bay Collaboration are the most precise to date, an improvement of about a factor of two over previous measurements published early in 2014. The new results were published in Physical Review Letters.

“We have now moved from the discovery era to the precision measurement era,” says Kwong Lau, professor of physics and the principal investigator from the University of Houston in the Daya Bay Collaboration. The Collaboration includes more than 200 scientists from seven regions and countries. The UH team working on Daya Bay includes faculty members Lau, Larry Pinsky and Lisa Whitehead; postdoctoral fellows Aaron Higuera and Dawei Liu; and graduate students Ian Mitchell and Ziping Ye.

It’s important to measure the mixing angle and mass splitting parameters as precisely as possible, Lau says, because neutrino behavior could hold the key to understanding the asymmetry between matter and antimatter in the universe. This asymmetry, known as the charge-parity or CP violation, explains why shortly after the Big Bang, when most matter and antimatter annihilated each other, some matter was left over to make up the universe we see today.

The Fluctuating Neutrino

The behavior of neutrinos is unlike any other fundamental particle: they seem to disappear, reappear, and transform themselves as they travel, unimpeded, from sources like the sun and other stars, through space, planets, and even our own bodies.

Neutrinos come in three flavors—electron, muon, and tau. And as a neutrino travels, thanks to quantum mechanical fluctuations, it oscillates between flavors. That is, a particle that starts out as an electron neutrino might at some point turn into a tau neutrino. Then at another point it will present itself more like it did in the beginning. As time goes by, these transformations happen again and again, with the oscillation having a particular amplitude and frequency—similar to sound and light waves.

The amplitude of neutrino oscillations gives scientists information about the rate at which neutrinos transform into different flavors, known as the mixing angle. The frequency of the oscillations gives information about the difference between the masses, a property known as mass splitting.

The Neutrino Net

To study neutrino oscillations, the Daya Bay Collaboration has immersed eight detectors in three large underground pools of water. These detectors sit at different distances from the six China General Nuclear Power Group reactors in Daya Bay. The reactors emit steady streams of electron antineutrinos, which for purposes of the experiment are essentially the same as electron neutrinos. The detectors pick up the transformations that occur as these millions of quadrillions of electron antineutrinos travel farther away from their origin in the reactors.

Based on the data collected over 217 days with six of the Daya Bay detectors and 404 days using all eight of the Daya Bay detectors, the research team has determined the value for a specific mixing angle, called theta13 (pronounced theta-one-three), to a precision two times better than previous results. Similar improvement was made in the precision of measuring the mass splitting.

“Because we have so much data and our detectors are performing very well, we’ve now reached precision measurements that will have implications for future neutrino experiments,” says Lisa Whitehead, assistant professor of physics at UH and co-convener of the Cosmogenic Working Group in the Daya Bay Collaboration. She adds that these measurements support the three-neutrino model, which describes physicists’ best thinking about the three types of neutrinos.

The Daya Bay Collaboration continues to take data. At the end of 2017 it will have roughly four times more data to further improve precision for both mixing angle of theta13 and corresponding mass splitting. By then, all three mixing angles (including theta12 and theta23) and mass splittings may be determined to comparable precisions.

The unprecedented precision of the data set allows for many other studies. The team is looking for evidence of a possible “sterile” neutrino, a hypothetical type that may mix with the three known neutrino flavors. If this sterile neutrino shows itself in the data, scientists will need to rethink the three-neutrino model. In addition, the record-breaking data sample is ideal for finding new physics beyond what is known.

“The Daya Bay experiment is looking at neutrinos to provide a better understanding of fundamental physics,” says Aaron Higuera, UH physics postdoctoral fellow.

- Release courtesy of Kwong Lau and the Daya Bay Collaboration