Chapter 26
What is a Neutrino?

Neutrinos are the most common particle in the universe but also the most unreactive. According to recent experiments a neutrino has either no mass or a very small mass. Furthermore they appear to exist in three states, that can morph from one to the other.

SED’s prediction is that because they are a fermion with a spin of h/2 they must be a kind of large roton with a very small mass, but always consisting of one complete h of angular momentum. Neutrinos are a device made to conserve that, but possibly with little other influence. A tiny mass means that they are big compared to most other fundamental particles. How big, we don’t know. From our perspective neutrinos aren’t massive but they may be like a balloon or soap bubble that moves very close to the speed of light.

Recent experiments show there are three types of neutrino, but why?

There are three dimensions and of course waves can remain separate and follow these, even when they are a standing wave or soliton. That is, relative to the direction they’re moving in. This could be a clue as to why there three types that display some helix-like behaviour when they move.

Other than photons of light, neutrinos are the lightest, biggest, fastest elementary particles that we know of. Ethereal is a word in which they excel, for they display very few other properties and appear to be quite inert.

Scientists know that the three types can transform into each other in a journey from the sun to earth. This has been timed and experimentally confirmed but not yet understood.

Physics has a concept called chirality meaning left-right handedness and this is something that, like many other particles, neutrinos portray as one of their few properties. It is used to identify them, but according to SED this is basically just spin. Or actually spin direction, either clockwise or anticlockwise. And because each neutrino spins in one of the three orthogonal directions (i.e. x,y and z) then this may lead to the three types. However, we don’t know exactly (or approximately) how things behave at or very near the speed of light

Chirality is a bit like reflection in a mirror, creating clockwise or anticlockwise spin. Also right or left handedness according to perspective. Reflection reverses chirality making spin appear to becoming towards you or away. It is the same spin though, according to the object itself.

Neutrinos are special and science has discovered that unlike other elementary particles they have only one type of chirality that can never change. Until now though it has been unable to offer an explanation for this behaviour. SED proposes that this is because they move very fast, faster than all other objects. So fast that nothing can pass them and turn around to look back on a neutrino. This would reverse its apparent spin and change its chirality, but does not happen.

Furthermore SED maintains that being a fermion means that maybe a neutrino actually has charge, we just haven’t devised a way to measure it yet.

This is because a neutrino has almost no mass and therefore its roton must be very much larger than other elementary particles. Its internal energy is much less and therefore its frequency is likewise very low.

Being very big, also means that each loop in its structure is correspondingly large and therefore according to the magnetic flux quantum, its E-M fields are both extremely weak with virtually no electric and magnetic force due to their constant charge.

This could be why no charge effects have ever been detected in neutrinos. We may need more sensitive equipment.

The Origin of Everything
(Online Edition)