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neutrino

[ noo-tree-noh, nyoo- ]

noun

, Physics.
, plural neu·tri·nos.
  1. any of the massless or nearly massless electrically neutral leptons. There is a distinct kind of neutrino associated with each of the massive leptons.


neutrino

/ njuːˈtriːnəʊ /

noun

  1. physics a stable leptonic neutral elementary particle with very small or possibly zero rest mass and spin 1 2 that travels at the speed of light. Three types exist, associated with the electron, the muon, and the tau particle


neutrino

/ no̅o̅-trē /

  1. Any of three electrically neutral subatomic particles with extremely low mass. These include the electron-neutrino, the muon-neutrino, and the tau-neutrino.
  2. ◆ The study of neutrinos that come to the earth as cosmic rays suggests that neutrinos can transform into each other in a process called neutrino oscillation . For this phenomenon to be theoretically possible, the three neutrinos must have distinct masses; for this reason, many scientists believe that they have mass.
  3. See Table at subatomic particle


neutrino

  1. An electrically neutral particle that is often emitted in the process of radioactive decay of nuclei . Neutrinos are difficult to detect, and their existence was postulated twenty years before the first one was actually discovered in the laboratory. Millions of neutrinos produced by nuclear reactions in the sun pass through your body every second without disturbing any atoms .


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Word History and Origins

Origin of neutrino1

< Italian (1933), equivalent to neutr ( o ) neuter, neutral + -ino -ine 2; coined by E. Fermi

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Word History and Origins

Origin of neutrino1

C20: from Italian, diminutive of neutrone neutron

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A Closer Look

Neutrinos were not observed until 1955, roughly a quarter of a century after the physicist Wolfgang Pauli first hypothesized their existence on theoretical grounds. Pauli was studying certain radioactive decay processes called beta decay , processes now known to involve the decay of a neutron into a proton and an electron. A certain amount of energy that was lost in these processes could not be accounted for. Pauli suggested that the energy was carried away by a very small, electrically neutral particle that was not being detected. (He originally wanted to name the particle a neutron but didn't publish the suggestion, and a few years later the particle we now know as the neutron was discovered and named in print. The Italian physicist Enrico Fermi then coined the term neutrino, which means “little neutron” in Italian.) Neutrinos are hard to detect because their mass, if they indeed have any, is extremely low, and they possess no electric charge; a chunk of iron a few light-years thick would absorb only about half of the neutrinos that struck it. Nevertheless, neutrinos can be detected, and three different types have been distinguished, each of which is associated with a particular lepton (the electron, the muon, and the taon) with which it is often paired in interactions involving the weak force. Recent analysis of neutrinos emanated by the Sun has suggested that each type of neutrino can spontaneously turn into one of the others in a process of neutrino oscillation, and for theoretical reasons this in turn would require that neutrinos have mass. If so, then despite their light weight, their abundance may in fact mean that neutrinos contribute significantly to the overall mass of the universe.

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Example Sentences

Also, Einstein did not base his original proposal of photons on Max Planck’s work, and Wolfgang Pauli did not say the neutrino could not be observed in the letter wherein he originally proposed it.

The turbulent matter bouncing around behind the shock wave also has more time to absorb neutrinos.

He and two others, Leon Lederman and Melvin Schwartz, shared the 1988 Nobel in physics for their technique for producing high-energy beams of neutrinos and for showing the existence of two types of neutrino.

The experiment switched on in 2007, detecting neutrinos from the sun for the first time almost immediately.

It is remarkable that his neutrino idea had emerged around the same time.

I made every last one of them, from the hunky handsome proton to the waifish, Starbucks-named neutrino.

"I think I am getting somewhere on my photon-neutrino-electron interchange-cycle," he announced.

The night he came home with six hundred newly-won credits, Hawkes opened a drawer and took out a slim, sleek neutrino gun.

He went on talking, about remote controls and radio transmission and positronic brains and neutrino-circuits.

And they know about the photon-neutrino-electron interchange.

The same thing goes for a proton or electron or neutron or even a neutrino.

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neutrettoneutrino astronomy