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How long does a neutrino detector filled with distilled water need to be to pick up neutrinos from one direction at about the level of a distant star within our galaxy?

Would an off the shelf avalanche like this work at the end of a silver-plated water filled glass tube?

Assuming you could get it straight enough could a fiber-coupled avalanche diode used for fiber optics like this work for a single pixel of resolution at that amplitude? How long would it need to be if so?

I know neutrino detectors are typically very large - I'm curious if it is possible to make a single-pixel (and cheaper) largely directional detector by making it very thin, straight and long.

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    $\begingroup$ Are you a billionaire? Sure. Nothing to stop you. On the other hand, not even an NSF funded experiment that probably burned trough over $200 million at this point managed to do what you have in mind there, so it wouldn't be the best use of your money. In general, if the big boys can't do it, it can't be done. :-) $\endgroup$
    – CuriousOne
    Commented Feb 8, 2016 at 4:01
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    $\begingroup$ If you want to build something like a neutrino detector, I would suggest you build a photomultiplier based cosmic ray detector. That's kind of easy, it is well within a DIY budget and you get bragging rights that you are doing exactly the same things as the professionals. Buy a large area PMT like this one: ebay.com/itm/…, preferably with a base, get a high voltage power supply and get or build a fast transient digitizer (FPGA kits for $50 can do that). $\endgroup$
    – CuriousOne
    Commented Feb 8, 2016 at 4:24
  • $\begingroup$ Good question! As you might guess, the answer is "no", at least on your budget. However, a muon detector? maybe... $\endgroup$
    – user56903
    Commented Feb 8, 2016 at 8:56
  • $\begingroup$ To try and avoid the "it's not possible" bit a bit and focus on the engineering of it: would it be possible to detect neutrinos from a point source over background noise if you had a 10ft long 4" diameter tube coated on the inside with silver and filled with distilled water with a photomultiplier at the end? If it wouldn't be strong enough how long would the tube need to be for something as stron as the sun and a single photomultiplier? (assuming the tube is pointed at the point source) $\endgroup$
    – CoryG
    Commented Feb 10, 2016 at 0:57
  • $\begingroup$ The current version of this question (v2, now six years old) asks specifically about detecting astrophysical neutrinos using scattering in distilled water. However, there are compact neutrino detectors such as COHERENT and miniTimeCube where the detection happens in a liter-scale volume of a different material. There is space for a non-duplicate question about whether those approaches are more DIY-friendly. Potential askers should note that COHERENT and miniTimeCube are both designed to nestle right up next to a neutron source, where there are lots of neutrinos. $\endgroup$
    – rob
    Commented Jul 24 at 12:33

2 Answers 2

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The highest flux of solar neutrinos come directly from the proton-proton interaction, and have a low energy, up to 400 keV. There are also several other significant production mechanisms, with energies up to 18 MeV. From the Earth, the amount of neutrino flux at Earth is around 7·10^10 particles/cm2/s.

Neutrinos from the sun have been seen in the Kamiokande detector

To detect charged particles, the KAMIOKANDE detector utilizes Cherenkov radiation in the water. Cherenkov radiation is generated when a charged particle pass through the matter with velocity greater than that of light in the matter. Cherenkov photon is detected by the 20"PMT which is attached inside of the water tank. Owing to a total of 2140 t of water, KAMIOKANDE can detect rare events such as a nucleon decay and a neutrino event

The photons are created by electrons generated by neutrino interactions:

In a neutral current interaction, the neutrino leaves the detector after having transferred some of its energy and momentum to a target particle. If the target particle is charged and sufficiently light (e.g. an electron), it may be accelerated to a relativistic speed and consequently emit Cherenkov radiation, which can be observed directly. All three neutrino flavors can participate regardless of the neutrino energy. However, no neutrino flavor information is left behind.

In a charged current interaction, the neutrino transforms into its partner lepton (electron, muon, or tau). However, if the neutrino does not have sufficient energy to create its heavier partner's mass, the charged current interaction is unavailable to it. Solar and reactor neutrinos have enough energy to create electrons.

In super Kamiokande , they report with 50000 tons of pure water 5000 events in two years. You can do the numbers for your experimental setup. You would have to wait very many years. In addition the cheap diode will not do. In SK they have photomultipliers, i.e. single photons are amplified to get a signal. A cheap photodiode works with many photons.

Disadvantages of photodiodes compared to photomultipliers:

  1. Small area

  2. No internal gain (except avalanche photodiodes, but their gain is typically 10^2–10^3 compared to 10^5-10^8 for the photomultiplier)

  3. Much lower overall sensitivity

4.Photon counting only possible with specially designed, usually cooled photodiodes, with special electronic circuits

  1. Response time for many designs is slower

  2. latent effect

So the answer is no, one cannot have a cheap DIY neutrino detector.

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  • $\begingroup$ The other thing wrong with the proposal is the requested angular resolution. Because the sensitivity of the detector is to charged final state particles scattered by the neutrino, the angular resolution for low energy events is poor. The famous SuperK picture of the sun in neutrinos has an angular size measured in degrees. $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 2, 2018 at 18:43
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There are a few difficulties in building Neutrino detectors. First and foremost, Neutrinos only rarely interact with ordinary matter. For a neutrino to have an effect on ordinary matter, it has to strike the nucleus of an atom. Unfortunately, atomic nuclei are ridiculously small in comparison to the atom itself - by diameter, the atomic nuclei is about a million times smaller than the size of the atom itself. By volume, it's around one billion billion (10 to the 18th power) times smaller.

Neutrinos hit solid chunks of matter about less often than a particle of light strikes a piece of dust in a nebulae in space. It happens, but you need huge amounts of matter for it to happen. Nebulae are light-years across, with only a few motes of dust every meter. If you could somehow see neutrinos, the earth would look like a particularly faint, spherical, nebulae (if it could be seen at all).

If you built an extremely long detector (preferably hundreds of meters), you would detect neutrinos on rare occasion. But because the rate of neutrino detection depends on how much matter you are observing, and less on the arrangement of that matter, it'd just be more efficient to build a giant sphere of matter, carefully measured for neutrinos.

This brings us to the second problem. When a neutrino hits a piece of matter, it releases a small amount of energy. A neutrino detector is mostly just a giant chunk of matter, and some detectors that can sense those small bursts of energy. But lots of other things also cause small bursts of energy. The only way around this is to block everything that isn't a neutrino. Thankfully, this is relatively simple. Pretty much everything blocks anything that isn't a neutrino. That's why they often build neutrino detectors in salt mines or other underground, highly insulated places: you could spend millions of dollars building a huge concrete pile of stuff to block 99.9999999% of everything that isn't neutrinos, or you could just built it underground.

What you're proposing is possible (linear detector), although you couldn't fit it on a desk...

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