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Impossible Neutrino 2023 Primordial Black Hole Explosion

Impossible Neutrino Detected: Scientists Link 2023 Cosmic Shock to Exploding Primordial Black Holes

Did astronomers just witness a black hole in the act of exploding? Physicists at the University of Massachusetts Amherst believe the answer may be yes. This artistic illustration offers an imaginative glimpse of tiny primordial black holes as envisioned by the researchers. Credit: University of Massachusetts Amherst

A baffling cosmic event in 2023 saw a neutrino slam into Earth with an energy level that defied all known physics. The particle was vastly more powerful than anything humanity has ever generated, dwarfing even the Large Hadron Collider's capabilities by a factor of 100,000. Researchers at the University of Massachusetts Amherst now believe such an event could occur when a rare, early-universe black holedescribed as quasi-extremal, undergoes a catastrophic explosion.

Their findings, reported in Physical Review Letters, not only solve the mystery of the impossible neutrino but also position it as a potential key to understanding the universe at its most fundamental level.

From Stellar Collapse to the Early Universe

Black holes are no longer the stuff of speculation and scientists have a solid grasp of how they form. When a massive ageing star exhausts its nuclear fuel, it collapses under its own weight and detonates in a colossal supernova, leaving behind a region of spacetime with gravity so intense that nothingnot even lightcan escape. These stellar black holes are extraordinarily massive and far all particle purposes, remarkably stable.

However, in 1970, physicist Stephen Hawking proposed the existence of a very different class of black hole: the Primordial Black Hole (PBH). Unlike their stellar counterparts, these objects would not be born from dying stars but from extreme conditions in the universe's earliest moments, shortly after the Big Bang.

Though still theoretical, primordial black holes would be immensely dense yet potentially far lighter than any black hole observed to date. Hawking also demonstrated that, under certain condition, they could gradually release particles through a process now known as Hawking radiation.

How Evaporating Black Holes Might Explode

"The smaller a black hole becomes, the hotter it grows and the more particles it releases," explains Andrea Thamm, co-author of the study and assistant professor of physics at the University of Massachusetts Amherst.

"As primordial black holes evaporate, they lose mass, heat up rapidly and emit increasing amounts of radiation in a runaway process that ends in an explosion. It is this Hawking radiation that our telescopes are designed to detect."

What Scientists Could Detect From Such Explosions

Observing such an event would provide scientists with an unprecedented inventory of every subatomic particle in existence, including:

  • Electrons
  • Quarks
  • Higgs bosons
  • Hypothetical dark matter particles
  • Potentially unknown forms of matter beyond modern physics

Previous work by the UMass Amherst Team suggests these explosions may occur more often than once assumedperhaps as frequently as once every ten yearsand that today's space-based observatories are capable of detecting them.

For now, however, the idea remains firmly in the realm of theory.

An 'Impossible' Neutrino Appears

Then, in 2023, the KM3NeT Collaboration recorded the arrival of an "impossible" neutrinoprecisely the type of signal the UMass Amherst researchers had predicted might soon be detected.

Yet the discovery raised an immediate puzzle. IceCube, a comparable experiment designed to detect high-energy cosmic neutrinos, failed to register the event and has never observed anything even one hundredth as powerful.

If primordial black holes are widespread throughout the universe and explode regularly, why are Earth's detectors not being inundated with these extreme particles? The mismatch between the two experiments remains a critical mystery.

The Dark Charge Explanation

"We believe primordial black holes carrying a 'dark charge'what we describe as quasi-extremal PBHsmay be the crucial missing piece," says Joaquim Iguaz Juan, a postdoctoral physicist at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and co-author of the study.

This so-called dark charge mirrors the familiar electric force, but instead involves an extremely heavy, theoretical counterpart to the electron, referred to by the team as a "dark electron".

Michael Baker, another co-author and assistant professor of physics at UMass Amherst, acknowledges that simpler PBH models already exist.

"Our approach is more intricate," he explains, "but that complexity may reflect reality more accurately. What makes this exciting is that our model can account for a phenomenon that previously seemed impossible to explain."

Andrea Thamm adds that PBHs endowed with a dark charge behave in fundamentally different ways from their simpler counterparts.

"We've demonstrated that these unique properties can reconcile all the apparently conflicting experimental results," she says.

Connecting Neutrinos to Dark Matter

The researchers are confident that their dark-charge primordial black hole model does more than explain the mysterious neutrino it may also solve the long-standing puzzle of dark matter.

"Observations of galaxies and the cosmic microwave background clearly indicate that some form of dark matter exists," says Baker.

"If our proposed dark charge is correct," adds Joaquim Iguaz Juan, "then a substantial population of primordial black holes could exist. This would align with current astrophysical evidence and could account for all of the universe's missing dark matter."

Baker describes the neutrino detection as a turning point.

"Observing such a high-energy neutrino was extraordinary. It opened an entirely new window on the cosmos. We may now be close to experimentally confirming Hawking radiation, finding evidence for primordial black holes and uncovering new particles beyond the Standard Modelwhile finally explaining dark matter."

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Key Takeaways for Readers

  • A single neutrino detected in 2023 challenged the limits of known physics.
  • Scientists link the event to exploding primordial black holes from the early universe.
  • A new concept of 'dark charge' may explain conflicting detector results.
  • The theory could also provide a breakthrough explanation for dark matter.

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