Measuring Bilbo

How do you measure the properties of something that’s really hard to detect? It turns out that because of the wonderful usefulness of conservation laws, you can infer what you can’t easily see by finding as much as you can from what you can detect, and then figuring out what’s left over. Somewhat like detecting the invisible Bilbo Baggins by spotting his shadow. The original discovery of the neutrino, in fact, was due to the beta energy spectrum being continuous, which only makes sense if there is a third particle being emitted, and conservation of charge dictated that the neutrino be neutral.

Ultra-Cold Atoms and Neutrino Masses

The proposed experiment is to trap a large amount of tritium at very low temperatures (meaning that the atoms are very nearly stationary), and look at the recoil of the helium that’s produced. When the tritium decays into helium, one of two things happens: either the helium captures the electron on the way out, becoming neutral helium, in which case the atom recoils in a direction opposite the direction of the neutrino; or the electron and neutrino both escape, in which case the helium ion recoils in a direction that depends on the exit direction of both the electron and the neutrino. In either case, the helium is moving, and if everything is done right, it’s moving considerably faster than the trapped tritium atoms.

To measure the neutrino mass, then, all you need to do is detect the helium and measure both the magnitude and direction of its velocity. If the electron was captured, that alone is enough to let you find the momentum (and thus mass) of the neutrino; if the electron escaped, you need to determine its velocity as well, but again, you can calculate the momentum of the neutrino.

Unfortunately the link to the Physics World article doesn’t work work for me, since it’s subscription-only. Fortunately Chad also provides a link to the ArXiv proposal

This sounds very familiar to me, since measuring the recoil from beta decay is the experiment I worked on as postdoc at TRIUMF. The idea in that experiment (for a metastable K-38 atom decaying to Ar-38, both with zero-spin nuclei) is that the parent decays and the daughter is no longer held in the trap, so the escaping beta and daughter can be detected. If the beta and Ar have traveled in opposite directions, it means the neutrino must be either counter-propagating or co-propagating with the beta, since there has been no change in the spin of the nucleus; this has implications for the type of weak interaction that has taken place (scalar or vector, i.e. does the W-boson have any spin) but each case has a different implication for the amount of recoil the Ar atom will have, and this shows up in the time-of-flight. The standard model predicts that, in this case, the beta and the neutrino will be emitted in the same direction. Here’s a PRL and ArXiv for that experiment.

In one approach of the Tritium experiment they’re banking on the electron being captured, so you remove the three-body complication, and having a metastable helium recoil to detect (rather than neutral Helium, which is a lot harder), but adding the complication of photons to detect as the He decays into that metastable state. The other approach involves the three-body momentum, in which the emitted beta is not captured. This allows them to detect a Helium ion, which is much easier to do.

Risky Business

The benefits of teaching the statistics of risk analysis.

Probability lessons may teach children how to weigh life’s odds and be winners

“You can tick off story after story that’s probably interesting to the people it happened to, but not statistically unusual at all. There was a recent story about a family in Gloucestershire with three children all born on January 29. We were contacted by a journalist and asked what are the chances of this happening.

“The chances are about one in 135,000, or seven in a million. But there are a million families with three children in the UK. So it’s almost certain that this family is not unique and when the story went online, someone wrote in and said, ‘I was born on the same day as my two brothers’.”

[…]

The unfounded scare over the MMR vaccine, and outlandish claims of success for alternative medicines, were prime examples.“One must think all the time of what is not being reported – the dog that didn’t bark. When we see a hole-in-one video on YouTube we are sensible enough to know that this has been selected out of millions of shots that missed. We need to think the same way every time we hear of someone claiming that some new treatment has cured them.”

via

I Know Where You Live

I Am Here: One Man’s Experiment With the Location-Aware Lifestyle

To test whether I was being paranoid, I ran a little experiment. On a sunny Saturday, I spotted a woman in Golden Gate Park taking a photo with a 3G iPhone. Because iPhones embed geodata into photos that users upload to Flickr or Picasa, iPhone shots can be automatically placed on a map. At home I searched the Flickr map, and score—a shot from today. I clicked through to the user’s photostream and determined it was the woman I had seen earlier. After adjusting the settings so that only her shots appeared on the map, I saw a cluster of images in one location. Clicking on them revealed photos of an apartment interior—a bedroom, a kitchen, a filthy living room. Now I know where she lives.