The Tree-Antenna Quest: A New Way to Spot Neutrinos

AntarcticaMon Nov 25 2024
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Neutrinos, tiny particles that zoom through your body every second, are tough to catch. They barely interact with anything, so detecting them requires lots of material. Scientists have tried heavy water tanks or ice cameras in Antarctica. Now, a scientist named Steven Prohira has a peculiar idea: using trees as antennas. Sounds crazy, right? But Prohira thinks it could be a game-changer. He wants to find ultra-high-energy neutrinos, which carry massive amounts of energy.
These particles come from powerful cosmic events like collapsing stars or black holes. Other experiments use antennas to spot these neutrinos, but finding spots for antennas can be tricky. So, Prohira looked at old army studies and found that trees can pick up radio waves. He thinks they might work for neutrino detection too. It's a wild idea, but if it works, it could help us learn more about the universe's most extreme events.
https://localnews.ai/article/the-tree-antenna-quest-a-new-way-to-spot-neutrinos-2f2df97a

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