WEBVTT 00:00:00.000 --> 00:00:18.024 35c3 preroll music 00:00:18.024 --> 00:00:27.449 Herald: Our speaker is Jost Migenda and he is PhD student in astroparticle physics 00:00:27.449 --> 00:00:34.980 from the University of Sheffield in the UK and Jost is going to talk about going deep 00:00:34.980 --> 00:00:41.500 underground to watch the stars. Please give a huge round of applause for Jost 00:00:41.500 --> 00:00:42.530 Migenda. 00:00:42.530 --> 00:00:50.860 applause 00:00:50.860 --> 00:00:56.220 J: Good morning everybody. I'm glad you managed the first day of congress. Now 00:00:56.220 --> 00:01:02.300 physics rarely makes highlight news. And if and when it does it is often treated a 00:01:02.300 --> 00:01:09.500 black box, where you pourd in money and scientist on one end, you wait a while and 00:01:09.500 --> 00:01:16.240 knowledge drops out. So today in this talk I want to do this a bit differently. I 00:01:16.240 --> 00:01:20.249 want to give you a glimpse behind the scenes of an experiment, I have been 00:01:20.249 --> 00:01:26.290 working on for over 4 years now. First as part of my master's thesis and then as a 00:01:26.290 --> 00:01:33.920 PhD student. Now earlier this year we published a design report which is over 00:01:33.920 --> 00:01:38.030 300 pages long and contains much more detail about the experiment than you 00:01:38.030 --> 00:01:45.240 probably want to know. So I'll focus on just some of the highlights in this talk. 00:01:45.240 --> 00:01:48.719 But before we actually talk about the detector I'll have to introduce you to the 00:01:48.719 --> 00:01:55.389 particles we're looking for. And that story begins over 100 years ago with 00:01:55.389 --> 00:02:02.279 radioactive beta decay. Now in radioactive beta decay, you have a nucleus of one 00:02:02.279 --> 00:02:07.850 chemical element that turns into a nucleus of a different element and emits an 00:02:07.850 --> 00:02:16.060 electron or in modern language we would say a neutron decays into a proton and an 00:02:16.060 --> 00:02:21.920 electron. Now after that was discovered there were lots of experiments done to 00:02:21.920 --> 00:02:26.570 measure the energy of the outgoing electron and experiment after experiment 00:02:26.570 --> 00:02:34.910 found that there was some variance in energy but was always lower than expected. 00:02:34.910 --> 00:02:39.810 And physicists at the time came up with all sorts of possible explanations for 00:02:39.810 --> 00:02:45.650 what might be going wrong with these experiments but they excluded those 00:02:45.650 --> 00:02:51.870 explanations very quickly as well. So after a while physicists became desperate 00:02:51.870 --> 00:02:56.250 and some pretty well-known physicists actually thought: "Well, maybe we'll just 00:02:56.250 --> 00:03:04.070 have to give up on conservation of energy". So in this desperate situation a 00:03:04.070 --> 00:03:09.260 guy called Wolfgang Pauli came up with what he himself call "a desperate way 00:03:09.260 --> 00:03:14.540 out". So in this letter to a group of his colleagues which he addressed as "Dear 00:03:14.540 --> 00:03:21.420 radioactive ladies and gentlemen", Pauli suggested that maybe there's another 00:03:21.420 --> 00:03:28.570 particle created in this beta decay. And Pauli originally called this particle 00:03:28.570 --> 00:03:33.560 neutron but of course two years later the particle we nowadays know as Neutron was 00:03:33.560 --> 00:03:40.340 discovered. So Pauli's particle was re- named neutrino. Now you might be wondering 00:03:40.340 --> 00:03:46.720 well why didn't they observe this particle already. And the answer is very simple. 00:03:46.720 --> 00:03:52.160 Neutrinos are like ghosts. So what I mean by there is they can quite literally, you 00:03:52.160 --> 00:03:58.620 know, go through walls or through your body. And in effect we can do a little 00:03:58.620 --> 00:04:03.740 experiment right now to try and detect neutrinos. So to help me with this 00:04:03.740 --> 00:04:12.810 experiment, please give me thumb's up. Everyone? Okay so there's two things 00:04:12.810 --> 00:04:16.750 happening right now. First thing of all you're giving me a massive confidence 00:04:16.750 --> 00:04:23.560 boost. But, you know, more importantly somewhere out there the sun is shining and 00:04:23.560 --> 00:04:28.040 it's producing a lot of neutrinos and nuclear fusion. Now these neutrinos are 00:04:28.040 --> 00:04:35.480 flying to Earth through the roof of this building and then through your thumbnail. 00:04:35.480 --> 00:04:43.060 And right now as you're listening to me around 60 billion neutrinos are flying 00:04:43.060 --> 00:04:49.180 through your thumbnail. 60 billion neutrinos flying through your thumbnail 00:04:49.180 --> 00:04:57.970 every second. How does that feel? Hmm? You don't feel any of them? Right, so that's 00:04:57.970 --> 00:05:02.740 how ghost-like neutrinos are. And of course physicists are clever and shortly 00:05:02.740 --> 00:05:08.210 after Pauli had this idea some of them estimated that how often neutrinos 00:05:08.210 --> 00:05:13.570 interact with normal matter and they found that there is no practically possible way 00:05:13.570 --> 00:05:18.410 of observing the neutrino. And that remained true for over 20 years 00:05:18.410 --> 00:05:28.440 afterwards. So now that I have introduced you to neutrinos. Let's talk about 00:05:28.440 --> 00:05:36.370 building a detector to actually detect them. And the original motivation for 00:05:36.370 --> 00:05:44.150 building this detector was something a bit different. I talked about beta decay and 00:05:44.150 --> 00:05:48.580 over the next decades physicists slowly discovered more particles. They discovered 00:05:48.580 --> 00:05:55.620 that protons and neutrons are made up out of quarks and in the 1970s theoretical 00:05:55.620 --> 00:06:00.960 physicists came up was are some Grand Unified Theories basically precursors to 00:06:00.960 --> 00:06:06.800 string theory. And these theories predicted that the proton should decay as 00:06:06.800 --> 00:06:14.820 well. So of course you know we build detectors to look for that and a group in 00:06:14.820 --> 00:06:20.610 Japan built a detector near the town of Kamioka which they called the Kamioka 00:06:20.610 --> 00:06:27.290 Nucleon Decay Experiment or Kamiokande for short. Now they didn't observe any proton 00:06:27.290 --> 00:06:33.030 decay but shortly after they built it somebody had a suggestion that if we 00:06:33.030 --> 00:06:37.130 changed just a little bit above their detector, if we modified just a little, we 00:06:37.130 --> 00:06:44.650 would also be able to detect neutrinos with that. So they modified the detector 00:06:44.650 --> 00:06:49.290 switched it back on and just a couple of weeks later they actually observe 00:06:49.290 --> 00:06:57.770 neutrinos from an exploding star just outside our Milky Way. And that was the 00:06:57.770 --> 00:07:03.540 birth of neutrino astronomy. And for that the then-leader of the experiment received 00:07:03.540 --> 00:07:11.860 the Nobel Prize in 2002. Now after over a decade of running physicists were 00:07:11.860 --> 00:07:15.860 basically hitting the limits of what we could do with a detector of their size. So 00:07:15.860 --> 00:07:22.470 we needed to build a bigger detector and that one was very creatively named Super- 00:07:22.470 --> 00:07:29.360 Kamiokande. And it's about 20 times bigger, started running in 1996 and still 00:07:29.360 --> 00:07:39.680 running to this day. Now Super-K did not discover proton decay but did detect a lot 00:07:39.680 --> 00:07:43.889 of neutrinos and made very fascinating discoveries. For example, they discovered 00:07:43.889 --> 00:07:49.070 that different types of neutrinos can change into each other back and forth as 00:07:49.070 --> 00:07:55.259 they travel. That's like you buying a cone of vanilla ice cream and then as you walk 00:07:55.259 --> 00:08:01.570 out it suddenly turns into chocolate ice cream. That's really weird. And for their 00:08:01.570 --> 00:08:08.860 discovery just a few years ago they received the Nobel Prize again. But today 00:08:08.860 --> 00:08:12.580 we are again hitting the limit of you know what we can learn from a detector that 00:08:12.580 --> 00:08:18.520 size. So of course the next step is to build an even bigger detector and we're 00:08:18.520 --> 00:08:26.280 calling it Hyper-Kamiokande. By the way "super" and "hyper" mean exactly the same 00:08:26.280 --> 00:08:34.099 thing. Just one is Latin and one is Greek. So we're currently getting ready the plans 00:08:34.099 --> 00:08:37.950 to build Hyper-Kamiokande and we will start construction probably in the spring 00:08:37.950 --> 00:08:47.340 of 2020. Details of the Noble Prize are still to be determined. Now I said that 60 00:08:47.340 --> 00:08:52.630 billion neutrinos go through your thumbnail every second. Of course Super- 00:08:52.630 --> 00:08:58.170 Kamiokande which is running right now is much larger than your thumbnail. So 00:08:58.170 --> 00:09:03.630 there's not just 60 billion but 10000 billion billion neutrinos passing through 00:09:03.630 --> 00:09:13.680 every day and only 10 or 15 of those get detected. So let's look at what this 00:09:13.680 --> 00:09:20.060 detection process looks like. Now this is the water inside Super-K. And there's a 00:09:20.060 --> 00:09:24.140 bunch of electrons in there but they'll show just one. And there's neutrinos 00:09:24.140 --> 00:09:31.940 flying through not just one, not just a few, but loads of them. And most of them 00:09:31.940 --> 00:09:36.520 go straight through without leaving a trace. But every once in a while we're 00:09:36.520 --> 00:09:41.450 lucky and one of those neutrinos will actually hit the electron and give it a 00:09:41.450 --> 00:09:47.190 little kick. And that little kick you know like billiard balls basically and that 00:09:47.190 --> 00:09:55.170 little kick accelerates the electron to faster than the speed of light in water. 00:09:55.170 --> 00:09:59.870 Still slower than the speed of light in vacuum which is the absolute cosmic tempo 00:09:59.870 --> 00:10:07.200 limit. But faster than the speed of light in water. And then you get basically a 00:10:07.200 --> 00:10:12.920 sonic boom, but with light, which is this cone of light. And let's just show the 00:10:12.920 --> 00:10:19.680 animation again. So you've got this cone of light that hits the wall of the 00:10:19.680 --> 00:10:25.660 detector you see a little ring, this ring of light. Well we've got very sensitive 00:10:25.660 --> 00:10:33.260 photo sensors all over the inside walls to detect this flash of light and from how 00:10:33.260 --> 00:10:39.760 bright it is we can tell the energy of the neutrino. And we can also tell, you know 00:10:39.760 --> 00:10:43.550 just like was billiard balls, we can approximately tell what directions a 00:10:43.550 --> 00:10:51.230 neutrino came from just based on in which direction it pushed the electron. So 00:10:51.230 --> 00:10:57.190 that's the basic idea how we detect neutrinos from the sun. Now let's talk 00:10:57.190 --> 00:11:03.420 about what it's actually like to build one of these detectors. So this is a drawing 00:11:03.420 --> 00:11:11.120 of Hyper-Kamiokande and you can see it's 78 meters high, 74 meters in diameter and 00:11:11.120 --> 00:11:16.459 on the top left there is a truck for comparison. But maybe a better size 00:11:16.459 --> 00:11:22.200 comparison is to compare this to buildings which you're familiar with. Like the 00:11:22.200 --> 00:11:28.880 entrance hall which you just came in through this morning. Or the Statue of 00:11:28.880 --> 00:11:36.899 Liberty and it doesn't quite fit in there. The arm still looks out. But you could 00:11:36.899 --> 00:11:41.940 drown the Statue of Liberty in this detector which nowadays is probably some 00:11:41.940 --> 00:11:51.060 sort of political metaphor. So this is the giant detector. And what's more we're 00:11:51.060 --> 00:11:57.310 building it inside the mountain about 650 meters underground. So that all the rock 00:11:57.310 --> 00:12:02.279 on top will act as a kind of a natural shield against all sorts of other 00:12:02.279 --> 00:12:06.560 particles, that are raining down on the atmosphere from outer space so that all 00:12:06.560 --> 00:12:12.640 other particles get stuck and only Neutrinos can make it through. Now of 00:12:12.640 --> 00:12:18.420 course to build such a huge cavern inside the mountain - that's something that we 00:12:18.420 --> 00:12:25.540 physicists can't do on our own. So we need to talk to geologists who look at the rock 00:12:25.540 --> 00:12:31.640 quality and tell us, you know, what's a good place to build this cavern - where is 00:12:31.640 --> 00:12:37.580 the rock stable enough to do that. And to figure out the rock quality, they drill 00:12:37.580 --> 00:12:46.860 bore holes in what's actually called a boring survey. laughter Now, during my 00:12:46.860 --> 00:12:51.510 years working on this experiment, I had to listen to several hours of talks on these 00:12:51.510 --> 00:12:58.300 geological surveys and I can tell you that name is quite appropriate. laughter 00:12:58.300 --> 00:13:02.000 though of course, there's a reason I'm not a geologist, so, you know, take this with 00:13:02.000 --> 00:13:09.420 a grain of salt. But okay, let's say, you know, we talked to geologists, they told 00:13:09.420 --> 00:13:15.160 us where we can build our detector. The next step is: We need to actually excavate 00:13:15.160 --> 00:13:21.140 the cavern. And something to keep in mind is that we are building this somewhere in 00:13:21.140 --> 00:13:26.400 the mountains of Japan, you know, pretty far away from any major city. So we have 00:13:26.400 --> 00:13:32.690 to think about stuff like lack of local infrastructure like what's the electricity 00:13:32.690 --> 00:13:40.610 supply like. Do we need to add the power line. Or what are the local roads like. 00:13:40.610 --> 00:13:44.480 And do they have enough capacity for, you know, dozens of trucks every day to 00:13:44.480 --> 00:13:50.620 transport away the excavated rock. And, by the way, where do you store all that 00:13:50.620 --> 00:13:56.710 excavated rock? Because we will be moving something like half a million cubic meters 00:13:56.710 --> 00:14:01.390 of rock. You can't just store that in your backyard. You need to find a place where 00:14:01.390 --> 00:14:08.050 all that fits. And, of course, if you've listened to or watch the Lord of the 00:14:08.050 --> 00:14:15.119 Rings, you'll know it's dangerous to dig too deeply, to greedily. So we need a 00:14:15.119 --> 00:14:23.211 Balrog early warning system as well. But okay let's say we've got all those and we 00:14:23.211 --> 00:14:31.300 managed to build a cavern, and now we need to fill it. And as detector material we 00:14:31.300 --> 00:14:36.971 use water. Both because it's actually pretty good for detecting neutrinos, but 00:14:36.971 --> 00:14:42.130 also because it's cheap and there's lots of it. So you can afford to build a 00:14:42.130 --> 00:14:49.690 detector of this size. A detector so big that that little dot there is a scuba 00:14:49.690 --> 00:14:59.459 diver. But even with water, you hit limits of, you know, how much you can get. So to 00:14:59.459 --> 00:15:04.680 fill Hyper-Kamiokande you need about as much water as 5000 people use in a year. 00:15:04.680 --> 00:15:13.860 And that's for drinking, for showering, for washing their car and so on. Now 00:15:13.860 --> 00:15:17.830 that's easy if you're near a big city. But we are not, we're somewhere in the 00:15:17.830 --> 00:15:23.560 mountains in Japan where the next biggest town has far fewer than 5000 people. So 00:15:23.560 --> 00:15:30.980 how do we get enough water to actually fill our detector? And... we could use 00:15:30.980 --> 00:15:38.060 rivers nearby, we could use springs. We could wait for for the end of winter and 00:15:38.060 --> 00:15:43.460 for the snow in the mountains to melt and use that to fill our detector. But if you 00:15:43.460 --> 00:15:48.660 use melting snow to fill the detector, you can only fill it once a year. So, you 00:15:48.660 --> 00:15:54.950 know, even "where do you get the water" is is a pretty... pretty important question 00:15:54.950 --> 00:16:03.779 that you need to solve. And then, we're not just using any water but we actually 00:16:03.779 --> 00:16:09.160 have, we will build our own water purification system. So that we don't have 00:16:09.160 --> 00:16:15.959 any, you know, traces of radioactivity in there, any trace of dust and stuff in 00:16:15.959 --> 00:16:23.420 there. And let me let me just tell you just how pure this water will be. So, this 00:16:23.420 --> 00:16:29.450 is my supervisor, who, when he was a PhD student, worked in the detector on some 00:16:29.450 --> 00:16:35.610 maintenance work, so he was working on a boat doing the work, and then at the end 00:16:35.610 --> 00:16:41.149 of his shift he leaned back on the boat, and just the tip of his long hair fell 00:16:41.149 --> 00:16:48.019 into the water, which he didn't know just didn't think about too much until at the 00:16:48.019 --> 00:16:54.790 end of his shift. He went home, you know, went to bed, fell asleep, and then woke up 00:16:54.790 --> 00:17:00.980 in the middle of the night, with his whole head itching like mad. Now, what had 00:17:00.980 --> 00:17:06.569 happened there? The ultra pure water had sucked all of the nutrients out the tip of 00:17:06.569 --> 00:17:12.179 his hair and then through osmosis over time those had sucked the nutrients out of 00:17:12.179 --> 00:17:30.660 the rest of his hair, and then his skin. So that's how pure that water is. Now, I 00:17:30.660 --> 00:17:35.410 said "all over the inside walls". And here is, kind of, a photo of the inside of the 00:17:35.410 --> 00:17:41.910 detector. And all these kind of golden hemispheres, those are what we call 00:17:41.910 --> 00:17:48.850 Photomultiplier tubes, of PMTs for short. And those are, basically, giant very 00:17:48.850 --> 00:17:54.990 sensitive pixels. And we will have 40,000 of those lining the inside wall of the 00:17:54.990 --> 00:18:02.220 detector. Now, in smaller detectors, you could just have from each PMT one cable 00:18:02.220 --> 00:18:05.990 leading to the top of the detector and then have your computers there to analyze 00:18:05.990 --> 00:18:12.799 the signal. With a detector of this size, you just can't do that because you would 00:18:12.799 --> 00:18:21.559 need 40,000 cables some of which are over 100 meters long. That wouldn't work. So we 00:18:21.559 --> 00:18:26.169 have to put some electronics in the water to digitize the signal and combine signal 00:18:26.169 --> 00:18:33.940 from multiple PMTs into one, and then use just a single cable, to bring it up 00:18:33.940 --> 00:18:41.070 to the top where we analyze the signal. But that means we have to put electronics 00:18:41.070 --> 00:18:47.240 into the water, so that creates a whole bunch of new problems. For example, we 00:18:47.240 --> 00:18:51.169 need these electronics to be watertight. And I'm not talking about the level of 00:18:51.169 --> 00:18:54.890 watertight as you'd expect from your smartwatch where it survives, you know, 00:18:54.890 --> 00:18:59.719 you standing under the shower for five minutes. I'm talking below 60 metres of 00:18:59.719 --> 00:19:07.900 water for 20+ years. This electronics also need to be very low power, because we 00:19:07.900 --> 00:19:13.390 can't heet up the water too much. Otherwise these pixels, the 00:19:13.390 --> 00:19:21.700 Photomultiplier Tubes, would become noisy and this would kill our signal. And then 00:19:21.700 --> 00:19:26.160 also, because we don't want one defective cable to kill a whole section of the 00:19:26.160 --> 00:19:30.510 detector. We need to implement some sort of mesh networking to introduce some 00:19:30.510 --> 00:19:37.660 redundancy. Now each of that by itself is not... not a heart problem. Each of these 00:19:37.660 --> 00:19:42.870 problems can be solved. It's just a lot of additional work you suddenly have to do, 00:19:42.870 --> 00:19:51.510 because your detectors is that huge. And it gets even worse: This is what one of 00:19:51.510 --> 00:19:58.169 these PMTs looks like. It's about 50 centimeters in diameter, and inside that 00:19:58.169 --> 00:20:06.760 glass bulb is a vacuum. So it's under a lot of pressure. Plus we add 60 metres of 00:20:06.760 --> 00:20:12.370 water on top of it, which adds additional pressure. So you need to make absolutely 00:20:12.370 --> 00:20:16.830 sure when you're manufacturing those that you don't have any weak points in the 00:20:16.830 --> 00:20:25.640 glass. And they don't just have to withstand that water pressure, but there 00:20:25.640 --> 00:20:32.990 will probably be some PMTs that have some weak points, some air bubbles or something 00:20:32.990 --> 00:20:40.490 in the glass. Some structural weakness. And the neighboring PMT don't only have to 00:20:40.490 --> 00:20:44.950 survive the normal water pressure. They also need to survive whether their 00:20:44.950 --> 00:20:51.100 neighboring PMT is imploding and sending out a pressure wave. And that's not just a 00:20:51.100 --> 00:20:57.950 hypothetical - that actually happened, you know, 18 years ago. It's 17 years ago in 00:20:57.950 --> 00:21:05.120 Superkamiokande. And that, you know, within seconds killed more than half of 00:21:05.120 --> 00:21:13.670 the PMTs we had in there and it took years to restore the detector to full capacity. 00:21:13.670 --> 00:21:19.830 So, lots of problems to solve, and, you know, one group, one university can't 00:21:19.830 --> 00:21:24.539 solve all these on their own. So we've got this multinational collaboration with over 00:21:24.539 --> 00:21:29.919 300 people from 17 different countries marked in green here and across many 00:21:29.919 --> 00:21:36.850 different time zones. So right here right now, here it's about you know just before 00:21:36.850 --> 00:21:42.430 noon. In Japan people have already had dinner and they're going to bed soon. In 00:21:42.430 --> 00:21:47.410 the U.S., people haven't even got up yet in the morning. So good luck finding a 00:21:47.410 --> 00:21:57.540 time for phone meetings which works for all of these people. So, that's kind of a 00:21:57.540 --> 00:22:01.720 glimpse behind the scenes of what it's like to work on this detector and to 00:22:01.720 --> 00:22:07.780 actually build it. But now I want to talk about what we use the detector for. And 00:22:07.780 --> 00:22:13.330 I've got two examples. But of course there's a whole bunch more that we do, I 00:22:13.330 --> 00:22:23.940 just don't have time to talk about it today. So, first example: Why does the sun 00:22:23.940 --> 00:22:30.060 shine? That seems like such a simple question, right? And yet it turns out it's 00:22:30.060 --> 00:22:36.330 really difficult to answer. So, in the days of the Industrial Revolution, when, 00:22:36.330 --> 00:22:41.480 you know, burning coal and steam power was all the rage, people thought that, you 00:22:41.480 --> 00:22:48.120 know, maybe it's, you know, a giant ball of burning coal. But when you when you do 00:22:48.120 --> 00:22:54.780 the math, it turns out that would burn for a few thousand years maybe. So that 00:22:54.780 --> 00:23:01.000 definitely doesn't work. A bit later, physicists suggested that maybe the sun is 00:23:01.000 --> 00:23:06.530 just slowly shrinking and shrinking and it's that gravitational energy which is 00:23:06.530 --> 00:23:13.050 released as light. And that would give you a life time of a few million years. But 00:23:13.050 --> 00:23:17.070 then you've got, you know pesky geologists coming along and saying "no no, we've got 00:23:17.070 --> 00:23:21.830 these rock formations or, I don't know, fossils maybe, for more than a few million 00:23:21.830 --> 00:23:28.310 years old on Earth. So the sun has to live longer than a few million years. And the 00:23:28.310 --> 00:23:33.750 arguments from the 19th century between Lord Kelvin and the geologists back then 00:23:33.750 --> 00:23:41.400 are just amazing to read. If you find those somewhere. But, of course, nowadays 00:23:41.400 --> 00:23:49.250 we know that the answer is nuclear fusion. And here's, you know, a bunch of reactions 00:23:49.250 --> 00:23:54.790 which lead you the energy generation of the sun. But now the question is "how can 00:23:54.790 --> 00:24:02.720 we check that? How can we check that this is actually what's going on?" And the 00:24:02.720 --> 00:24:08.570 answer is neutrinos, because many of these reactions produce neutrinos, and we can 00:24:08.570 --> 00:24:16.309 detect them. So the one we typically detect in Super- and later Hyperkamiokande 00:24:16.309 --> 00:24:21.220 is the one on the bottom right here, called "Bore and eight neutrinos" because 00:24:21.220 --> 00:24:28.929 those have the highest energy. So they are easiest for us to detect. And the rate of 00:24:28.929 --> 00:24:35.559 various of these processes depends very much on the temperature. So by measuring 00:24:35.559 --> 00:24:40.320 how many of these neutrinos we see, we can measure the temperature inside the core of 00:24:40.320 --> 00:24:48.650 the sun. And we have done that, and we know that it's about 15.5 million Kelvin, plus or 00:24:48.650 --> 00:24:54.740 minus 1 percent. So we know the temperature in the core of the sun to less 00:24:54.740 --> 00:25:05.640 than 1 percent uncertainty. That's pretty amazing if you ask me. And, you know, I 00:25:05.640 --> 00:25:10.560 said that we could detect the directions the neutrinos were coming from. So we can 00:25:10.560 --> 00:25:16.700 actually take a picture of the sun with neutrinos. Now this is a bit blurry and 00:25:16.700 --> 00:25:21.400 pixelated, not as nice as what you'd get from a, you know, from the optical 00:25:21.400 --> 00:25:27.810 telescope. But this is still a completely different way of looking at the sun. And 00:25:27.810 --> 00:25:33.600 what this tells us is that this, you know, giant glowing orb in the sky. That's not 00:25:33.600 --> 00:25:45.900 some optical illusion but that actually exists. Okay. So onto our next topic. 00:25:45.900 --> 00:25:54.279 Exploding stars or supernovae which is what my own research is mostly about. So 00:25:54.279 --> 00:25:59.669 supernovae are these giant explosions where one single star, like in this 00:25:59.669 --> 00:26:05.760 example here, can shine about as bright as a whole galaxy consisting of billions of 00:26:05.760 --> 00:26:15.060 stars. And the rule of thumb is this: However big you think supernovae are 00:26:15.060 --> 00:26:23.830 you're wrong. They're bigger than that. Randall Munroe as an XKCD fan had this 00:26:23.830 --> 00:26:30.290 excellent example of just how big supernovae are so he asks which of the 00:26:30.290 --> 00:26:33.980 following would be brighter in terms of the amount of energy delivered to your 00:26:33.980 --> 00:26:42.441 retina. Option 1: A supernova, seen from as far away as the sun is from earth or 00:26:42.441 --> 00:26:49.920 Option 2: A hydrogen bomb pressed against your eyeball. So which of these would be 00:26:49.920 --> 00:27:00.280 brighter. What do you think? You remember the the rule of thumb we had earlier this 00:27:00.280 --> 00:27:08.769 supernova is bigger than that. In fact it's a billion times bigger than that. So 00:27:08.769 --> 00:27:15.340 supernovae are some of the biggest bangs since the original big bang. They also 00:27:15.340 --> 00:27:19.990 leave a neutron star or a black hole which are really interesting objects to study in 00:27:19.990 --> 00:27:26.240 their own right and the outgoing shockwave also leads to the creation of lots of new 00:27:26.240 --> 00:27:33.770 stars. But maybe most importantly supernovae are where many of the chemical 00:27:33.770 --> 00:27:40.779 elements around you come from. So whether it's things like the oxygen in your lungs 00:27:40.779 --> 00:27:46.860 or the calcium in your bones or the silicon in your favorite computer chip. 00:27:46.860 --> 00:27:51.539 Life as we know it, and congress as we know it could not exist without 00:27:51.539 --> 00:28:01.569 supernovae. And yet we don't actually understand how these explosions happen... 00:28:01.569 --> 00:28:18.890 well I have no idea what's happening.... life as we know it could not exist without 00:28:18.890 --> 00:28:25.560 supernovae and yet we don't actually understand how these explosions happen. 00:28:25.560 --> 00:28:31.380 And even observing them with telescopes doesn't really help us because telescopes 00:28:31.380 --> 00:28:37.059 can only ever see the surface of a star. They can't look inside the core of the 00:28:37.059 --> 00:28:44.529 star where the explosion actually takes place. So that's why we need neutrinos. 00:28:44.529 --> 00:28:51.020 And we have tens of thousands of supernovae with optical telescopes, with 00:28:51.020 --> 00:28:58.710 neutrinos we've observed just one. This one in February of 1987. And we've seen 00:28:58.710 --> 00:29:06.889 two dozen neutrinos which you see here on the right. That's what we know. So we know 00:29:06.889 --> 00:29:11.770 basically that there were many neutrinos emitted during the first one second or so 00:29:11.770 --> 00:29:18.980 and then fewer and fewer for the next 10 seconds. We know that neutrinos make up 00:29:18.980 --> 00:29:25.990 most of the energy of the explosion of the supernova, with the actual energy of the 00:29:25.990 --> 00:29:32.390 explosion and the visible light making just up a tiny fraction. We know that the 00:29:32.390 --> 00:29:42.450 neutrinos arrive a few hours before the light. And that's all, that's all we know. 00:29:42.450 --> 00:29:46.830 And still about these two dozen events, these two dozen neutrinos more than 00:29:46.830 --> 00:29:52.710 sixteen hundred papers are written. That's more than one paper a week for over 30 00:29:52.710 --> 00:29:59.730 years. So this gives you an idea of just how important this event was. And how 00:29:59.730 --> 00:30:03.770 creative physicists are. Or I guess, you could call it desperate. 00:30:03.770 --> 00:30:09.079 Laughter But you know, I prefer creative. In fact 00:30:09.079 --> 00:30:14.740 this, you know, this one Supernova, we observed was such big deal, that 30 years 00:30:14.740 --> 00:30:22.690 later February of last year we had a conference in Tokyo on supernova neutrinos 00:30:22.690 --> 00:30:30.700 and we had a 30th anniversary celebration. So there we were about 40 or 50 physicists 00:30:30.700 --> 00:30:38.270 looking over the skyline of Tokyo having dinner, there's the now leader of the 00:30:38.270 --> 00:30:43.680 Super-Kamiokande experiment who was a PhD student back then when it happened, and in 00:30:43.680 --> 00:30:49.650 his hand he's holding the original data tape with the events that he himself 00:30:49.650 --> 00:30:56.830 analyzed back then. So there we were, and at one point that evening we actually 00:30:56.830 --> 00:31:04.419 started to sing Happy Birthday. So you know how it goes - happy birthday to you, 00:31:04.419 --> 00:31:11.779 happy birthday to you, happy birthday dear supernova 1987-A. You know it absolutely 00:31:11.779 --> 00:31:21.029 doesn't work, but it was still amazing. So that's all we know, and then there's what 00:31:21.029 --> 00:31:26.689 we think we know, and most of that comes from computer simulations of supernovae. 00:31:26.689 --> 00:31:33.440 But the problem is, those are really really hard. You know it's one of these 00:31:33.440 --> 00:31:38.880 extremely rare situations where all four fundamental forces: gravity, 00:31:38.880 --> 00:31:44.910 electromagnetism, and the weak, and the strong nuclear force, all play a role. You 00:31:44.910 --> 00:31:49.399 know normally, in particle physics you don't have to worry about gravity, and in 00:31:49.399 --> 00:31:53.899 pretty much all other areas of physics you only have to worry about gravity and 00:31:53.899 --> 00:31:59.620 electromagnetism. Here all four play a role. You've also got nonlinear 00:31:59.620 --> 00:32:05.170 hydrodynamics of the gas and plasma inside the star. You've got the matter moving 00:32:05.170 --> 00:32:09.620 relativistically at 10 or 20 percent of the speed of light and you've got extreme 00:32:09.620 --> 00:32:14.320 pressures and extreme temperatures that are sometimes beyond what we can produce 00:32:14.320 --> 00:32:23.470 in the laboratory on earth. So that's why these simulations even in 2018 are still 00:32:23.470 --> 00:32:28.260 limited by the available computing power. So we need to do a lot of approximations 00:32:28.260 --> 00:32:34.929 to actually get our code to run in a reasonable time, but that gives you, some, 00:32:34.929 --> 00:32:41.429 that produces some problems, and in fact the week I started my PhD one of those 00:32:41.429 --> 00:32:46.210 groups doing the supernova simulations published a paper saying that there is a 00:32:46.210 --> 00:32:52.080 long list of numerical challenges and code verification issues. Basically we're using 00:32:52.080 --> 00:32:57.890 this approximations and we don't know exactly how much error they introduce, and 00:32:57.890 --> 00:33:03.390 the results of different groups are still too far apart, and that's not because 00:33:03.390 --> 00:33:06.670 those people are dummies. Quite the opposite they're some of the smartest 00:33:06.670 --> 00:33:14.799 people in the world. It's just that the problem is so damn hard. In fact, in many 00:33:14.799 --> 00:33:20.090 of these simulations the stars don't even explode on their own, and we don't know 00:33:20.090 --> 00:33:25.070 whether that means that some of these approximations just introduce numerical 00:33:25.070 --> 00:33:31.390 errors which change the result, or whether it means that there are some completely 00:33:31.390 --> 00:33:36.340 new physics happening in there which we don't know about, or whether that is 00:33:36.340 --> 00:33:44.149 actually realistic and some stars you know in the universe don't explode but just 00:33:44.149 --> 00:33:52.730 implode silently into a blackhole. We don't know. We just don't know. So take 00:33:52.730 --> 00:34:02.280 any, you know, any results of the simulations with a grain of salt. That said 00:34:02.280 --> 00:34:09.029 here's our best guess for what happens. So we start out was a massive star that's at 00:34:09.029 --> 00:34:15.179 least eight times the mass of our sun, and it starts fusing hydrogen to helium, and 00:34:15.179 --> 00:34:22.659 then on and on into heavier elements until finally it reaches iron, and at that point 00:34:22.659 --> 00:34:31.440 fusion stops because you can't gain energy from fusing two iron nuclei. So there the 00:34:31.440 --> 00:34:37.378 iron just accretes in the core of the star while in the outer layers - here in orange 00:34:37.378 --> 00:34:43.668 - nuclear fusion is still going on, but as more and more iron accretes and that core 00:34:43.668 --> 00:34:50.839 reaches about one-and-a-half solar masses it can't hold its own weight anymore and 00:34:50.839 --> 00:34:55.819 it starts to collapse, and inside the core in nuclear reactions you're starting to 00:34:55.819 --> 00:35:04.770 form neutrinos which I'm showing us ghost emoji here. Now let's zoom in a bit. The 00:35:04.770 --> 00:35:13.279 core continues to collapse until at the center it surpasses nuclear density, and 00:35:13.279 --> 00:35:21.669 at that point it's so dense that the neutrinos are actually trapped in there. 00:35:21.669 --> 00:35:27.469 So even neutrinos which literally can go through walls can not escape from there 00:35:27.469 --> 00:35:35.779 because matter is so dense, and the incoming matter basically hits a wall 00:35:35.779 --> 00:35:39.690 because the matter in the center can't be compressed any further, so just hits the 00:35:39.690 --> 00:35:46.209 wall and bounces back. So from that collapse you suddenly get an outgoing 00:35:46.209 --> 00:35:51.299 shock wave, and in the wake of that shockwave suddenly you get a whole burst 00:35:51.299 --> 00:35:58.650 of neutrinos which escape the star quickly. Now that shockwave moves on and 00:35:58.650 --> 00:36:05.920 slows down and as it slows down the matter from outer layer still falls in, and in 00:36:05.920 --> 00:36:13.390 this kind of collision region where neutrinos in the center are still trapped 00:36:13.390 --> 00:36:18.660 in that collision region, neutrinos are, you know, being produced at a relatively 00:36:18.660 --> 00:36:25.140 steady rate and the shock wave has pretty much stopped and just wavers back and 00:36:25.140 --> 00:36:32.529 forth, and we see some neutrino emission. Now after about half a second, maybe a 00:36:32.529 --> 00:36:37.589 second, neutrinos from the center are slowly starting to escape. You know most 00:36:37.589 --> 00:36:44.079 of them are still trapped but some are making their way outside and some of those 00:36:44.079 --> 00:36:48.809 actually manage to leave the star while others interact with matter in this 00:36:48.809 --> 00:36:54.410 shockwave layer and give that matter a little energy transfer a little push and 00:36:54.410 --> 00:37:02.670 heat it back up. So the shock wave gets revived and the star actually explodes, 00:37:02.670 --> 00:37:09.520 and all of that took just one second, and then over the next 10 seconds or so the 00:37:09.520 --> 00:37:16.410 neutrinos remaining at the core slowly make their way outwards and then travel 00:37:16.410 --> 00:37:22.719 away at the speed of light hopefully to Earth to our detector. While that shock wave 00:37:22.719 --> 00:37:27.160 moves much slower than the speed of light, you know, slowly makes its way outwards 00:37:27.160 --> 00:37:32.999 and only a few hours later when that shock wave reaches the surface of the star do we 00:37:32.999 --> 00:37:41.049 actually see something with telescopes. So, remember earlier the neutrinos signal 00:37:41.049 --> 00:37:45.759 we saw was something like a bunch of neutrinos in the first second and then 00:37:45.759 --> 00:37:53.760 fewer and fewer neutrinos for 10 seconds. Not a lot of detail but what we might see 00:37:53.760 --> 00:37:58.730 is something like this: a brief and intense burst when the matter hits the 00:37:58.730 --> 00:38:03.680 wall and is thrown back in this first shock wave, then as the shock wave 00:38:03.680 --> 00:38:08.690 stagnates we might see some wiggles corresponding to the shock wave, you know, 00:38:08.690 --> 00:38:17.269 sloshing around aimlessly until the shock wave is revived. The explosion starts and 00:38:17.269 --> 00:38:22.079 then over the next 10 or so seconds we would see fewer and fewer neutrinos as a 00:38:22.079 --> 00:38:29.010 star cools down and as neutrinos escape. So if we have good neutrino detectors we 00:38:29.010 --> 00:38:34.099 should be able to watch, you know, millisecond by millisecond what exactly 00:38:34.099 --> 00:38:43.430 happens inside the star. Now luckily we've got many more neutrino detectors by now. 00:38:43.430 --> 00:38:46.690 Probably the biggest one is the Super- Kamiokande in the Mozumi Mine which would 00:38:46.690 --> 00:38:52.359 see about 4000 events from an average supernova in our Milky Way, and then we've 00:38:52.359 --> 00:38:58.069 got a bunch of other detectors which was typically you know hundreds of events, and 00:38:58.069 --> 00:39:01.579 some of these detectors are part of something called the supernova early 00:39:01.579 --> 00:39:07.789 warning system or SNEWS, and snooze is meant to act as a wake up call to 00:39:07.789 --> 00:39:14.130 astronomers. So when when these detectors observe neutrinos which are probably from 00:39:14.130 --> 00:39:20.309 a supernova they will send out an alert to astronomers to get their telescopes ready 00:39:20.309 --> 00:39:27.150 to be able to see that supernova from the very beginning and then of course just in 00:39:27.150 --> 00:39:31.769 the past few years we've also had gravitation wave detectors like LIGO in 00:39:31.769 --> 00:39:40.009 the U.S, Virgo in Italy, and in just a few years we will get another one called KAGRA 00:39:40.009 --> 00:39:45.709 which is located in Japan actually inside the same mountain as Super-Kamiokande. So 00:39:45.709 --> 00:39:50.260 they're literally next door neighbors, and then we might get another detector in 00:39:50.260 --> 00:39:56.300 India, maybe one China in the future. So that's three completely different ways of 00:39:56.300 --> 00:40:05.200 looking at supernovae. So when we observe a supernova it will be headline news, and 00:40:05.200 --> 00:40:10.209 now you know what's behind those headlines. So I've introduced you to 00:40:10.209 --> 00:40:16.631 neutrinos, I've told you a bit about what it's like to work on on such a detector 00:40:16.631 --> 00:40:22.479 and, you know the challenges of building a detector of this scale and I've showed you 00:40:22.479 --> 00:40:27.519 how with neutrinos we can observe things but we can't directly observe otherwise 00:40:27.519 --> 00:40:33.619 like the interior of exploding stars, and with that I want to thank you for your 00:40:33.619 --> 00:40:36.949 attention and please let me know if you have any questions. 00:40:36.949 --> 00:40:51.044 applause 00:40:51.044 --> 00:40:53.019 Herald: Thank you Jost, it was an amazing 00:40:53.019 --> 00:40:59.530 talk. We have plenty of time for questions and there are two microphones. Microphone 00:40:59.530 --> 00:41:03.630 one is on the left side of the stage, microphone two is in the middle so queue 00:41:03.630 --> 00:41:10.839 up and we're going to take some questions. First question from microphone two. 00:41:10.839 --> 00:41:17.410 Q: Yeah, thank you, I do have a question - I come from a mining area and I just 00:41:17.410 --> 00:41:24.450 looked up how deep other mines go and I'm wondering why do you dig into useless rock 00:41:24.450 --> 00:41:30.729 if you can just go to some area where there are mines that are no longer used, 00:41:30.729 --> 00:41:37.059 my area they go as deep as 1,200 metres I think. I just looked up and was surprised 00:41:37.059 --> 00:41:41.289 that the deepest mine on Earth is almost four kilometres in South Africa - an 00:41:41.289 --> 00:41:46.839 active goldmine - so why don't you use those? 00:41:46.839 --> 00:41:52.059 A: So, part of why we're using that particular location is because we used it 00:41:52.059 --> 00:42:00.390 for Super-K and Kamiokande before, and the mountain that Kamiokande was in actually 00:42:00.390 --> 00:42:07.759 is a mine. So we had some previous infrastructure there, and then there's I 00:42:07.759 --> 00:42:12.470 guess some tradeoff between the benefits you get from going deeper and deeper and 00:42:12.470 --> 00:42:19.670 the additional cost I think. Herald: Thank you, we have a question from 00:42:19.670 --> 00:42:24.650 the Internet, that's going to be narrated by our wonderful Signal Angel. 00:42:24.650 --> 00:42:37.839 Jost: Hello Internet. So the question, I didn't understand then whole question, but 00:42:37.839 --> 00:42:42.520 something about earthquake. Okay. Q: Does the earthquake affect the 00:42:42.520 --> 00:42:49.969 detector. A: Well there's two parts of the answer: 00:42:49.969 --> 00:42:58.660 Part one I'm not a geologist. Part two I think the earthquakes are mostly centered 00:42:58.660 --> 00:43:06.440 in the cavern on the east coast of Japan and we're about 200-300 kilometers away 00:43:06.440 --> 00:43:15.009 from there, so the region we're in is relatively stable, and in fact we've been 00:43:15.009 --> 00:43:22.949 running, since 1983 and we haven't had problems with earthquakes, and during the 00:43:22.949 --> 00:43:31.380 Fukushima earthquake our detector was mostly fine but we've actually had, so in 00:43:31.380 --> 00:43:37.599 addition to what I was talking about we're also producing a beam of neutrinos at an 00:43:37.599 --> 00:43:43.180 accelerator which we shoot at the detector, and that accelerator is right at 00:43:43.180 --> 00:43:48.510 the east coast. So, the only damage from the Fukushima earthquake was to that 00:43:48.510 --> 00:43:57.379 accelerator, not to the detector itself. I hope that answers your question. 00:43:57.379 --> 00:44:03.329 Herald: Next is from microphone two. Q: Hello, thanks for an interesting talk. 00:44:03.329 --> 00:44:10.090 Do you, or does science, have any theory if the neutrinos who hit the electron are 00:44:10.090 --> 00:44:16.680 affected themselves from this hit, are they like directed in another direction or 00:44:16.680 --> 00:44:22.979 lose some sort of energy themselves or just hit the electron and pass through. 00:44:22.979 --> 00:44:27.999 A: So, conservation of energy and of momentum still holds, so they would lose 00:44:27.999 --> 00:44:31.289 some energy as they give the electron a little kick. 00:44:31.289 --> 00:44:34.849 OK. Thank you. Herald: Thank you, one more question from 00:44:34.849 --> 00:44:38.279 mic two. Q: Hello, thanks for your talk. My 00:44:38.279 --> 00:44:44.359 question is you said that the only supernova where we detected some neutrinos 00:44:44.359 --> 00:44:50.509 from is from the 80's. So what is so special about that supernova that with all 00:44:50.509 --> 00:44:54.670 the new detectors built there was never another detection? 00:44:54.670 --> 00:45:00.149 A: So, the special thing about that one is that it was relatively close. So it was in 00:45:00.149 --> 00:45:05.940 the Large Magellanic Cloud about 150,000 light years away which is, you know, on 00:45:05.940 --> 00:45:13.279 cosmic scales our next door neighbor, whereas other supernovae which we observe 00:45:13.279 --> 00:45:17.059 can be you know millions of light years away. We can easily see them at that 00:45:17.059 --> 00:45:23.249 distance but we can't detect any neutrinos, and we expect about between 1 00:45:23.249 --> 00:45:28.999 and 3 supernovae in our Milky Way per century, so we're in this for the long 00:45:28.999 --> 00:45:32.249 term. Okay. 00:45:32.249 --> 00:45:36.039 Herald: Thank you, microphone two again please. 00:45:36.039 --> 00:45:43.630 Q: Hi, thanks for your talk. My question is you said that changing the water once a 00:45:43.630 --> 00:45:50.169 year is not often enough, how often do you change the water? 00:45:50.169 --> 00:45:56.709 A: How often do we change the water in the detector? - Yes - So we completely drain 00:45:56.709 --> 00:46:05.789 and refill the detector only for repair work which, you know, happens every 00:46:05.789 --> 00:46:10.680 depending on what we want to do but typically every couple of years to, you 00:46:10.680 --> 00:46:17.519 know, 10 plus years and apart from that we recirculate the water all the time to 00:46:17.519 --> 00:46:22.479 purify it because there will always be some traces of radioactivity from the 00:46:22.479 --> 00:46:27.599 surrounding rock which make the way in the water over time. 00:46:27.599 --> 00:46:33.640 Mic 2: Thank you. Herald: Thank you, and that would be all, 00:46:33.640 --> 00:46:38.635 that was a wonderful start to the Congress, thank you Jost. 00:46:38.635 --> 00:46:41.405 applause 00:46:41.405 --> 00:46:46.598 35c3 postroll music 00:46:46.598 --> 00:47:03.000 subtitles created by c3subtitles.de in the year 2019. Join, and help us!