On the frigid central plain of Antarctica, where the sun only rises once a year, a set of 5,160 light sensors encased in a cubic kilometer of crystal clear ice sits poised to register the flash of passing quantum particles.
In a study published in the journal Physical Review Letters, a team led by Francis Halzen, a professor of physics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, reported with 99 percent certainty that a hypothetical quantum particle called a sterile neutrino doesn't actually exist — ending a 20-year debate among physicists.
The study analyzed two years of data taken from the IceCube Neutrino Observatory, a South Pole instrument designed to detect neutrinos, the highest energy particles in the natural world. If the sterile neutrino had been identified, it would have been the first time a particle would have been found to exist outside the mathematical system used by physicists.
"I've said that the sterile neutrino is kind of like Elvis," Halzen said. "We see hints of it but we can never get a picture."
A neutrino is an incredibly low mass particle that was named for its neutral charge. Most are produced by radiation in the sun or are left over from the birth of the universe, though a few are made by nuclear reactors on Earth.
Neutrinos have very few interactions with physical forces and matter, so they are able to pass through the cosmos unhindered by giant stars or black holes.
According to the Standard Model, the mathematical system that physicists use to describe particles and the forces with which they interact, there are three flavors of neutrinos: tau, muon and electron.
But neutrinos are also one of the weirder particles in quantum physics and undergo a peculiar phenomenon called neutrino oscillation.