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In a nutshell: Neutrinos are the most abundant particles in the cosmos. In fact, an astounding 100 trillion of them pass harmlessly through your body every second. Because they rarely interact with other matter, they've earned the nickname "ghost particles." Yet, despite their abundance, they remain some of the trickiest particles to detect in the subatomic world.

Scientists working on the Short-Baseline Near Detector (SBND) at Fermilab have reached a major milestone – they've detected the experiment's first neutrino interactions.

The SBND is the final piece of Fermilab's Short-Baseline Neutrino Program, which involves over 250 scientists from Brazil, Spain, Switzerland, the UK, and the US. The detector is positioned near Fermilab's neutrino beam source, where it observes around 7,000 neutrino interactions daily – more than any other similar detector.

Currently, three "flavors" of neutrinos are known to exist: muon, electron, and tau. Remarkably, they oscillate between these flavors as they travel. The SBND's primary mission is to study these oscillations and potentially find evidence of a new "sterile" type of neutrino, which could unlock a hidden realm of new physics.

A team from the University of Sheffield, led by Professor Vitaly Kudryavtsev and Dr. Rhiannon Jones, played a key role in developing the SBND's instrumentation and software for reading and analyzing the vast number of neutrino signals.

In addition to the potential for new particle discoveries, SBND will provide crucial data for projects like the Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment (DUNE), another major neutrino undertaking currently in the works.

Neutrinos themselves might offer insights into one of the greatest mysteries in physics and cosmology: the nature of dark matter. Despite decades of searching for massive dark matter particles, results have been elusive. However, some theories suggest that light, neutrino-like particles could comprise this elusive matter.

"Theorists have devised a whole plethora of dark sector models of lightweight dark particles that could be produced in a neutrino beam and SBND will be able to test whether these models are true," said SBND physics co-coordinator Andrzej Szelc.

In other neutrino-related developments, the underwater observatory Astroparticle Research with Cosmics in the Abyss (ARCA) may have detected evidence of an ultra-high-energy neutrino from outer space. ARCA operates 3,500 meters below the Mediterranean Sea. Separately, CERN has been conducting neutrino experiments using the Large Hadron Collider.

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Without those tiny bastards, our cells might even be immortal, and not suffer age degradation. Who knows?
 
Without those tiny bastards, our cells might even be immortal, and not suffer age degradation. Who knows?
The only known immortal cells in humans are cancer cells. Sorry.
 
Unfortunately, it's more complicated than that:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Relationship_between_telomeres_and_longevity
I think neutrinos are too tiny to do any significant damage. Nonetheless one could still invent some sort of anti- neutrino clothing or even neutrino block/screen :p
hopefully you are just joking about the clothing. Seeing 7000 neutrinos a day is a gobsmacking,a hundred trillion of them go straight through you a second. Don't stop for , the earth, the sun without a care in the world, compare that to how long a photon takes to escape the centre of the sun.

These studies in fermilab, japan , china and europe not not yet that as the fundamental underlying truth, but they will rule out a lot of theories hitherto thought to be untestable
Seeing these and gravitons/waves is a game changer
 
Dark matter is like the Aether, it doesn't exist, it's a crutch for our limited understanding and over-reliance on the standard model. The arrogance to think we got it right the first time. Webb is turning cosmology on its head.
 
Dark matter is like the Aether, it doesn't exist, it's a crutch for our limited understanding and over-reliance on the standard model. The arrogance to think we got it right the first time. Webb is turning cosmology on its head.
dark matter is less contentious than dark energy, you can even map out dark energy to a certain degree. Ie need to dark matter to explain mass of galaxies and how it stay together.
Given that it can measure massive gravity wave events like 2 black holes joining, it does beg the question will be see gravity events that can't be expained by even see that can be seen by our telescopes, detectors
To reiterate a point I made above, detection of high energy neutrinos will rule out certain theories. We still don't have a good working knowledge of the early universe and to the current distribution in stars of the heavier elements, as need to cycle a few suns. ie early universe thought to only consist of hydrogen and helium,and it seems massive short lived stars needed to form and go pretty quick. We can already see along way back in time .
just as supposedly the universe did not make equal parts matter and anti-matter , I think vaguely from memory neutrino production was not symmetrical as well.
We probably never know everything, as we are part of the system - some weird mathematical theorem , plus we can't generate high enough energies to test certain stuff. but we can narrow it down and try and relate quantum physics with gravity etc
 
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