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What was the effect of the mutated neutrinos?

What was the effect of the mutated neutrinos?

“The neutrinos coming from the sun have mutated into a new kind of nuclear particle. They’re heating up the earth’s core and suddenly act like microwaves” – Dr Satnam Tsurutani.

Can neutrinos stop moving?

Once you create a neutrino, a tiny subatomic particle, it moves at nearly the speed of light, and it doesn’t stop. It keeps going in a straight line to the edge of the universe.

Can neutrinos be reflected?

Unfortunately, neutrinos don’t reflect photons and, even if they did, move too quickly to be spotted in this manner. Another way physicists detect particles is by placing something solid, such as a brick, in their path, then looking for the resulting flash of energy when the particle hits it.

Can neutrinos move through steel?

The problem for physicists is that neutrinos are impossible to see and difficult to detect. Any instrument designed to do so may feel solid to the touch, but to neutrinos, even stainless steel is mostly empty space, as wide open as a solar system is to a comet.

How do neutrinos affect humans?

Neutrinos don’t really affect the everyday lives of most humans: they don’t make up atoms (like electrons, protons and neutrons), and they don’t play a crucial role in objects their mass (like the Higgs boson).

Can neutrinos damage DNA?

Neutrinos are reluctant to interact with everyday matter. But if enough passed through the Earth in one go, then some would collide with the nuclei of atoms in living tissue. When this happens, the nuclei will recoil from the collision. Such recoils could damage DNA, producing cancer-causing mutations.

Is there any particle faster than light?

An Italian experiment has unveiled evidence that fundamental particles known as neutrinos can travel faster than light.

Are neutrinos faster than light?

Neutrinos are tiny, electrically neutral particles produced in nuclear reactions. Last September, an experiment called OPERA turned up evidence that neutrinos travel faster than the speed of light (see ‘Particles break light speed limit’).