Neutrino

From Citizendium
Revision as of 19:14, 5 August 2010 by imported>Anthony.Sebastian (edits for style)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This article is a stub and thus not approved.
Main Article
Discussion
Related Articles  [?]
Bibliography  [?]
External Links  [?]
Citable Version  [?]
 
This editable Main Article is under development and subject to a disclaimer.

In 1930, the physicist, Wolfgang Pauli (1900-1958),[1] postulated a new fundamental particle of the universe, subsequently (1935) named by the physicist, Enrico Fermi (1901-1954),[2] the neutrino ("little neutral one" in Fermi's Italian), an electrically uncharged particle associated with the negatively electrically charged particle, the electron, but presumed to have no mass.

By the time of Pauli's postulated the existence of the neutrino, physicists had already discovered that atoms, previously thought of as homogeneous and indivisible, consisted of sub-particles, called subatomic particles, specifically, protons and neutrons localized in a center-of-the-atom nucleus, the major owners of atoms' mass, and, by comparison tiny, electrons surrounding the nucleus. The protons each carried a unit of positive electrical charge and the electrons, equal in number to the number of protons, each carried a unit of negative electrical charge, rendering the atom as a whole electrically neutral, inasmuch as the neutron itself carried no electrical charge.

They had also discovered that the some atoms were unstable, in that they might emit one or more their subatomic particles, a process called radioactivity...

Basing his thinking on the widely accepted law of conservation of energy, Pauli postulated the existence of an electron-associated presumedly massless neutrino in order to reconcile the observed discrepancy between the energy carried by an electron emitted from the nucleus during the radioactive process called 'beta decay' — electron energy too small — and the energy change of the nucleus itself, the missing energy carried off by the postulated chargeless neutrino particle.[3]

References