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October 8, 2002
This year's Nobel Prize in Physics is concerned with the discoveries and detection of cosmic particles and radiation, from which two new fields of research have emerged, neutrino astronomy and X-ray astronomy. The Prize is awarded with one half jointly to: Raymond Davis Jr, Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, USA, and Masatoshi Koshiba, International Center for Elementary Particle Physics, University of Tokyo, Japan, “for pioneering contributions to astrophysics, in particular for the detection of cosmic neutrinos”, and the second half to Riccardo Giacconi, Associated Universities, Inc., Washington, DC, USA, “for pioneering contributions to astrophysics, which have led to the discovery of cosmic X-ray sources”. Here is a description of the scientists' award-winning achievements.
Why does the Sun
shine?
In the 19th century there were lively discussions about the
source of the Sun's energy. One theory was that this solar
reaction was due to the release of gravitational energy when the
Sun's material contracted. However, in this case, the calculated
life expectancy of the Sun was, in our eyes, short. It was
approximately 20 million years, compared with the age of the
Earth, which we know today is approximately 5 billion
years.
In 1920, an experiment showed that a helium atom has less mass
than four hydrogen atoms. The British astrophysicist Sir Arthur
Eddington realised that nuclear reactions in which hydrogen was
transformed into helium might be the basis of the Sun's energy
supply, using Albert Einstein's formula
E=m·c2. The transformation
of hydrogen into helium in the Sun gives rise to two neutrinos
for each helium nucleus that is formed by a series of reactions
(explained by, among others, the Nobel Prize Laureate Hans
Bethe). The dream of verifying this theory by detecting neutrinos
was considered a practical impossibility by most scientists.
However, in the 1950s the Nobel Prize Laureate Frederick Reines
and his colleagues succeeded in showing that it was possible to
prove the existence of neutrinos. In their experiment they used
the reactions in a nuclear reactor, which generates a large flux
of neutrinos.
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| High resolution image (jpeg 236kb) |
| Fig. 1 Davis's detector, which for the first time in history proved the existence of solar neutrinos. The tank, which was placed in a gold mine, contained more than 600 tonnes of tetrachloroethylene and was 14.6 metres long, with a diameter of 6.1 metres. |
The flux of neutrinos from the Sun was
estimated to be very large: thousands of billions of solar
neutrinos were reckoned to pass through our bodies every second
without our noticing them. The reason is that these neutrinos
react very weakly with matter, and only one of 1,000 billion
solar neutrinos would be stopped on its way through the
Earth.
In the late 1950s Raymond Davis Jr was the only scientist
who dared to try to prove the existence of solar neutrinos,
despite these poor odds. While most reactions in the Sun create
neutrinos with energies so low that they are very difficult to
detect, one rare reaction creates a high-energy neutrino. The
Italian physicist Bruno Pontecorvo proposed that it ought to be
possible to detect this neutrino after it had reacted with a
nucleus of chlorine, forming a nucleus of argon and an electron.
This argon nucleus is radioactive and has a life of about 50
days.
Particles captured in
mines
In the 1960s Davis placed a tank filled with 615 tonnes of the
common cleaning fluid tetrachloroethylene (Fig. 1) in a gold mine
in South Dakota, USA. Altogether there were some
2·1030 chlorine atoms in
the tank. He calculated that every month approximately 20
neutrinos ought to react with the chlorine, or in other words
that 20 argon atoms ought to be created. Davis's pioneering
approach was the development of a method for extracting these
argon atoms and measuring their number. He released helium gas
through the chlorine fluid and the argon atoms attached
themselves to it – an achievement considerably more
difficult than finding a particular grain of sand in the whole of
the Sahara desert!
This experiment gathered data until 1994 and all in all
approximately 2,000 argon atoms were extracted. However, this was
fewer than expected. By means of control experiments Davis was
able to show that no argon atoms were left in the tank of
chlorine, so it seemed as though our understanding of these
processes in the Sun was incomplete or that some of the neutrinos
had disappeared on their way to the Earth.
Neutrinos from
space
While Davis's experiment was running, the Japanese physicist
Masatoshi Koshiba and his team constructed another
detector, which was given the name Kamiokande. It was placed in a
mine in Japan and consisted of an enormous tank filled with
water. When neutrinos pass through this tank, they may interact
with atomic nuclei in the water. This reaction leads to the
release of an electron, creating small flashes of light. The tank
was surrounded by photomultipliers that can capture these
flashes. By adjusting the sensitivity of the detectors the
presence of neutrinos could be proved and Davis's result was
confirmed. Decisive differences between Davis's and Koshiba's
experiments were that the latter registered the time for events
and was sensitive to direction. It was therefore possible for the
first time to prove that neutrinos come from the Sun (Fig.
2a).
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| High resolution image (jpeg 306kb) |
| Fig. 2 a) Solar-neutrino observations in the Kamiokande experiment. A clear peak is visible at the angle corresponding to the direction of the Sun. The flat background comes from cosmic radiation and radioactivity around the detector. b) Observation of the burst of neutrinos from SN1987A. This figure shows the number of photomultipliers hit in a 17-minute interval beginning at 07.33 UT. The burst of neutrinos came at 07.35.35 UT on 23 February, 1987. |
The Kamiokande detector was hit in February 1987 by a burst of neutrinos from a supernova explosion, named 1987A, in a neighbouring galaxy to the Milky Way called the Large Magellanic Cloud (Fig. 2b). This lies at about 170,000 light years from the Earth (one light year corresponds to 1016 metres). If a neutron star is formed when a supernova explosion takes place, most of the enormous amount of energy released will be emitted as neutrinos. A total of about 1058 neutrinos is estimated to have been emitted from supernova 1987A, of which Koshiba's research group observed twelve of the approximately 1016 that passed through the detector. A similar experiment in the United States confirmed this discovery.
Do neutrinos
change?
In order to increase sensitivity to cosmic neutrinos, Koshiba
constructed a larger detector, Super Kamiokande, which came into
operation in 1996. This experiment has recently observed effects
of neutrinos produced within the atmosphere, indicating a
completely new phenomenon, neutrino oscillations, in which one
kind of neutrino can change to another type. This implies that
neutrinos have a non-zero mass, which is of great significance
for the Standard Model of elementary particles and also for the
role that neutrinos play in the universe. It could also explain
why Davis did not detect as many neutrinos as he had
expected.
Davis's and Koshiba's discoveries and their development of
instruments have created the foundation for a new field, neutrino
astronomy, which is of great importance for elementary particle
physics, astrophysics and cosmology. The Standard Model for
elementary particles will have to be modified if neutrinos have
mass, and this mass can be highly significant for the collected
mass of the universe. Studies designed to confirm or disprove the
neutrino oscillation theory are in progress at many laboratories
around the world.
An invisible
firmament
The X-rays Wilhelm Röntgen discovered in 1895 were quickly
put to use by physicists and doctors at laboratories and clinics
all over the world. In contrast it took half a century for
astronomers to study this type of radiation. The main reason was
that X-ray radiation, which can so easily penetrate human tissue
and other solid material, is almost entirely absorbed by the air
in the Earth's thick atmosphere. It was not until the 1940s that
rockets had been developed that could send instruments high
enough up in the atmosphere.
The first X-ray radiation outside the Earth was recorded in 1949
by instruments placed on a rocket by the late Herbert Friedman
and his colleagues. It was shown that this radiation came from
areas on the surface of the Sun with sunspots and eruptions and
from the surrounding corona, which has a temperature of several
million degrees Celsius. But this type of radiation would have
been very difficult to record if the Sun had been as far away as
other stars in the Milky Way.
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Fig. 3 The instrument in the nose of the Aerobee rocket that was launched in June 1962 by Giacconi and his group and which was the first to record a source of X-rays outside the solar system. The instrument, about one metre long, contained three Geiger counters (indicated by arrows), provided with windows of varying thickness so that the energy of the radiation could be determined. |
| High resolution image (jpeg 257kb) |
In 1959 the then 28-year-old Riccardo
Giacconi was recruited to build up a space-research program
for a company that was to make it easier for young researchers to
get commissions from e.g. NASA. Together with the man who took
this initiative, the late Bruno Rossi, Giacconi worked out
principles for how an X-ray telescope should be constructed. This
construction collected radiation with cone-shaped, curved mirrors
onto which the radiation falls very obliquely and is totally
reflected. This is the same phenomenon as when a landscape is
reflected in the air above an asphalt road on a hot summer's
day.
Giacconi and his newly-formed group also carried out rocket
experiments to try to prove the presence of X-ray radiation from
the universe, primarily to see whether the moon could emit X-ray
radiation under the influence of the Sun. In one experiment a
rocket flew at a high altitude for six minutes. No radiation from
the moon could be detected, but a surprisingly strong source at a
greater distance was recorded since the rocket was rotating and
its detectors (Fig. 3) swept the sky. In addition, a background
of X-ray radiation was discovered evenly distributed across the
sky.
These unexpected discoveries gave an impetus to the development
of X-ray astronomy. In time the way in which the direction of the
radiation could be determined was improved and the sources could
be identified with observations made in normal light. The source
discovered in the first successful experiment was a distant
ultraviolet star in the Scorpio constellation, Scorpius X-1 (X
for X-ray, 1 for the first). Other important sources were stars
in the Swan constellation (Cygnus X-1, X-2 and X-3). Most of the
newly-discovered sources were double stars, in which one star
circles in a narrow orbit around another object which is very
compact – a neutron star or perhaps a black hole (Fig. 4).
However, it was difficult to carry out these studies because the
possible observation times from the balloons and rockets were too
short.
X-ray satellites
broadened our horizons
In order to extend observation times, Giacconi initiated the
construction of a satellite to survey the sky for X-ray
radiation. This satellite was launched in 1970 from a base in
Kenya and was given the name UHURU (“freedom” in
Swahili). It was ten times more sensitive than the rocket
experiments and every week it was in orbit it produced more
results than all the previous experiments put together.
However, so far no high-definition X-ray telescope had been sent
into space that could provide sharp images. Giacconi constructed
one, which was ready for use in 1978. It was called the Einstein
X-ray Observatory and was able to provide relatively sharp images
of the universe at X-ray wavelengths. Its sensitivity had been
improved and objects a million times weaker than Scorpius X-1
(see above) could be recorded.
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| High resolution image (jpeg 311kb) |
| Fig. 4 A double star that generates X-rays. Gas streams out of the star down towards the compact object and accelerates in its strong gravitational field up to very high speeds. When the gas atoms collide with each other and are decelerated at the surface of the neutron star and by its magnetic field, intensive X-ray radiation is released. |
This telescope made a large number of
discoveries. Many X-ray double stars were studied in detail, not
least a number of objects that were thought to contain black
holes. More normal stars could also be studied for the first time
in X-ray radiation. Remnants of supernovas were analysed, X-ray
stars in galaxies outside the Milky Way were discovered and
eruptions of X-ray radiation from distant active galaxies could
be examined more closely. The X-ray radiation from the gas
between galaxies in galaxy groups helped scientists draw
conclusions about the dark matter content of the universe.
In 1976 Giacconi initiated the construction of an improved, even
larger X-ray observatory. It was not launched until 1999, and was
named Chandra after the astrophysicist and Nobel Prize Laureate
Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar. Chandra has provided extraordinarily
detailed images of celestial bodies in X-ray radiation (Fig. 5)
corresponding to those from the Hubble Space telescope or the new
Earth-based telescopes using visible light.
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| High resolution image (jpeg 849kb) |
| Fig. 5 Remnants of the
supernova – an exploding star – in the Cassiopeia
constellation which Tycho Brahe discovered in 1572 from
Herrevadskloster and described in detail. The supernova lies
at a distance of 7,500 light years from Earth and is 20 light
years wide (one light year corresponds to 1016 metres).
This image was taken by the
Chandra satellite in X-ray radiation. NASA/CXC/SAO. http://chandra.harvard.edu |
New light thrown on
black holes
Thanks to X-ray astronomy and its pioneers, in particular
Giacconi, our picture of the universe has been changed in
decisive ways. Fifty years ago our viewpoint was dominated by a
picture of stars and star constellations in equilibrium, where
any developments were very slow and gradual. Today we know that
the universe is also the scene of extremely rapid developments in
which enormous amounts of energy are released in processes
lasting less than a second, in connection with objects that are
not much larger than the Earth, but incredibly compact. Studies
of processes at these objects and in the central parts of active
galaxy cores are largely based on data from X-ray astronomy. A
new, fantastic zoo of important and strange celestial bodies has
been discovered and studied. Today the universe seems much more
remarkable than we believed 50 years ago – in no small part
thanks to X-ray astronomy.
| The Laureates | |
| Raymond
Davis Jr University of Pennsylvania Dept. of Physics and Astronomy School of Arts and Sciences University of Pennsylvania 116 College Hall Philadelphia, PA 19104-6377 USA www.upenn.edu |
US citizen. Born 1914 (87 years) in Washington, DC, USA. PhD in Chemistry 1942 at Yale University, Connecticut, USA. Professor Emeritus at the Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, USA. |
| Masatoshi
Koshiba International Center for Elementary Particle Physics University of Tokyo 7-3-1 Hongo, Bunkyo-ku Tokyo 113-0033 Japan www.icepp.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp/icepp-e.html |
Japanese citizen. Born 1926 (76 years), in Toyohashi, Aichi, Japan. PhD 1955 at the University of Rochester, New York, USA. Professor Emeritus at the University of Tokyo, Japan. |
| Riccardo
Giacconi Associated Universities, Inc. Suite 730 1400 16 th St., NW Washington, DC 20036 USA www.aui.edu |
US citizen. Born 1931 (71 years), in Genoa, Italy. PhD 1954 at the University of Milan. Director of Associated Universities, Inc., Washington, DC, USA. |