Three (or more?) Cerenkov rings
20 December 2000
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"On the third day of Christmas, my physicist sent to me ....". Multiple rings of Cerenkov light brighten up this display of an event found in the Super-Kamiokande
- neutrino detector in Japan. The pattern of rings
- produced when electrically charged particles travel faster through
the water in the detector than light does - is similar to the result if
a proton had decayed into a positron
and a neutral pion. The pion would decay immediately to two gamma-ray
photons that would produce fuzzy rings, while the positron would shoot
off in the opposite direction to produce a clearer ring. Such kinds of
decay have been predicted by "grand unified theories" that link three
of nature's fundamental forces
- the strong, weak and electromagnetic forces. However, there is so far
no evidence for such decays; this event, for example, did not stand up
to closer scrutiny.
Credit: Super-Kamiokande/Tomasz Barszczak
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