Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
Here we consider three fascinating problems in particle physics that can be approximated as two-level systems with a somewhat phenomenological Hamiltonian. Two of them involve neutrinos and one involves neutral K-mesons. Together they provide a remarkable success story of the applications of simple quantum-mechanical principles.
Neutrinos
Neutrinos are spin ½ particles with no charge and a minuscule mass. They interact with other elementary particles only through the so-called weak interaction. Neutrinos come in three different species (called flavors): electron-neutrino (νe), muon-neutrino (νµ), and tau-neutrino (ντ) and form a part of the so-called lepton family. They are neutral accompaniments to the charged leptons: electrons (e), muons (µ), and tau leptons (τ). In the following two sections we will ignore ντ and discuss the solutions of some rather fundamental problems in neutrino physics within the framework of two-level systems.
The solar neutrino puzzle
To understand the solar neutrino puzzle we need first to note that the energy that is radiated from the solar surface comes from intense nuclear reactions that produce fusion of different nuclei in the interior of the sun. Among the by-products of these reactions are photons, electrons, and neutrinos. In the interior it is mostly electron-neutrinos, νe's, that are produced. The shell of the sun is extraordinarily dense, so that the electrons and photons are absorbed. However, because neutrinos undergo only weak interactions they are able to escape from the solar surface and reach the earth.
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