Placeholder Image

字幕列表 影片播放

  • [ ♪ Intro ]

  • If you like cosmology, you've probably seen this picture before.

  • It's called the Cosmic Microwave Background, or the CMB,

  • and it's a false color image of the oldest light in the universe that physics allows us to see.

  • It's a baby photo from when space was around 400,000 years old.

  • But it not the oldest image we might one day capture.

  • There's another, elusive cosmic background created by some of the most mysterious particles physics has described: neutrinos.

  • Appropriately, it's called the Cosmic Neutrino Background.

  • And if astronomers are able to snap a photo of it, well,

  • it'll open up a treasure trove of knowledge about the universe when it was only a second old.

  • Both the CMB and its neutrino counterpart have to do with a phenomenon called decoupling.

  • These were moments when certain particles stopped interacting with the rest of the matter in the universe,

  • and could stream through space without, for the most part, hitting anything.

  • See, at the moment of the universe's birth,

  • it was so hot that everything was just a soup of fundamental subatomic particles and light.

  • Then, as space expanded, temperatures started dropping, and particles started slowing down.

  • Eventually, that allowed the formation of protons and neutrons, then atomic nuclei,

  • and then atoms as a whole. And so on and so forth.

  • The Cosmic Microwave Background formed when photons separated from this soup.

  • For the first several hundred thousand years, there were so many lone electrons zipping around that the universe was opaque,

  • because photons couldn't travel very far before getting scattered.

  • Then, as the universe grew, the density of these free electrons decreased.

  • Many also started getting locked up into newly-formed atoms, so the average time between photon scattering increased.

  • And 380,000 years after the Big Bang, light was able to stream unimpeded through the universe.

  • Scientists say that this is when photons decoupled from matter.

  • And images of the CMB show us that moment.

  • But photons weren't the first particles to separate from the primordial soup.

  • When the universe was only a second old, neutrinos high-tailed it outta there, freely flying through space.

  • They produce their own background radiation distinct from the CMB, called the C?B, or CNB.

  • The Cosmic Neutrino Background.

  • Neutrinos are in the same family of particles as electrons.

  • But unlike electrons, they're really hard to detect because they almost never interact with anything.

  • Like, you literally have trillions of them streaming through your body right now.

  • To neutrinos, even entire planets mean nothing.

  • This is why they were able to decouple from matter much faster than photons did.

  • They only had to wait for the universe to cool to 35 billion Kelvin, as opposed to a few thousand.

  • At that point, things were moving slowly enough, relatively speaking,

  • that neutrinos stopped crashing into other particles all the time.

  • Now, it's worth noting that not all neutrinos were made in the Big Bang.

  • They're also produced by stars as they undergo nuclear fusion,

  • and by your own body as certain radioactive atoms decay.

  • But cosmic neutrinos are a lot sneakier.

  • And right now, we don't have technology sensitive enough to find direct evidence of them.

  • Our current detectors can isolate neutrinos with energies on the order of 0.1 Megaelectron volts,

  • but that's over a billion times more energetic than cosmic neutrinos.

  • So we're working on indirect detection.

  • And there are a couple ways we can do that.

  • First, there's studying the CMB for any subtle imprints the CnuB may have made.

  • Basically, after neutrinos decoupled but before photons did,

  • the neutrinos would have created tiny sonic booms in the primordial soup.

  • They would've produced regions that were slightly hotter or colder than others nearby.

  • So far, some papers have reported detecting cosmic neutrinos' influence on the CMB.

  • A 2005 report in Physical Review Letters used data from the WMAP satellite and the Sloan Digital Sky Survey.

  • And Planck telescope data provided less ambiguous results a decade later.

  • It doesn't confirm anything for sure yet, but it is a promising start.

  • The other indirect detection method requires monitoring the radioactive decay of tritium.

  • That's a hydrogen atom with two extra neutrons in its nucleus.

  • Tritium naturally decays by emitting an electron,

  • but it can be forced to decay faster than usual if it absorbs a neutrino.

  • In that case, the electron it emits has a measurably different energy.

  • That energy actually depends on the energy of the neutrino that was absorbed.

  • So by tracking it, physicists would be able to tell the difference between the tritium absorbing a cosmic neutrino,

  • or one from another source.

  • The problem with this method, though, is scale.

  • Because the energy of cosmic neutrinos is so low, and our detectors aren't very large or sensitive,

  • we can only hope for a single detection a month. If that.

  • The KATRIN experiment in Germany, for example, uses 20 micrograms of tritium.

  • And under the most ideal of conditions they estimate they'll get 1.7 hits a year.

  • The PTOLEMY experiment at Princeton, on the other hand,

  • is currently operating a prototype device to track even more neutrinos.

  • It involves a detector the size of a postage stamp made of a single, atom-thick layer of tritium

  • on top of an atom-thick layer of carbon.

  • Ultimately, they hope to expand their amount of tritium up to 100 grams,

  • where they might capture 10 cosmic neutrinos a year.

  • So we'll see.

  • There's a ton of effort and money going into these techniques,

  • but scientists aren't doing it just for the thrill of the hunt.

  • Finding cosmic neutrinos would push back how far into the universe's history we can actually observe.

  • Right now, math can take us back further than the CMB,

  • but we don't have the experimental data to confirm it.

  • It's all hypothetical.

  • The CnuB would push us back to a time where matter and light readily interacted.

  • And knowing more about these cosmic neutrinos would inform astronomers how

  • what we normally think of as anti-social particles actually affected the structure of the universe.

  • So thanks, cosmic neutrinos currently flying straight through myyep.

  • There they go.

  • Through the entire planet.

  • What are you going to do?

  • Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow Space!

  • If you'd like to learn more about the Big Bang,

  • you can watch our episode about the first few moments of the universe that physics can't quite explain.

  • [ ♪ Outro ]

[ ♪ Intro ]

字幕與單字

單字即點即查 點擊單字可以查詢單字解釋

B2 中高級

宇宙中第一個中微子的追尋|宇宙中微子背景 (The Hunt for the First Neutrinos in the Universe | Cosmic Neutrino Background)

  • 2 0
    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
影片單字