Canadian Neutrino Researcher Wins Nobel Prize in Physics
Dr. Art McDonald wins Nobel Prize for work on neutrino oscillation
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Dr. McDonald shared the prize with Japanese colleague Professor Takaaki Kajita, who led the Super-Kamiokande collaboration. Both projects were large, international efforts aimed at studying the properties of the elusive neutrino, a sub-atomic particle produced by nuclear reactions.
Their great success was the discovery that neutrinos "oscillate" by transforming between three different "flavours" and this, in turn, implies that they have a tiny mass. Insights like this into the nature of neutrinos should hold keys to important questions about how the universe was formed.
Related Links
- Nobel Prize announcement
- Sudbury Neutrino Observatory
- CBC News story
- Quirks story on the latest in neutrino hunting
- Quirks Interview on the book Neutrino Hunters
- Bob's blog: Why Neutrinos Matter