Simple quantum mechanics explains GSI Darmstadt oscillations Even with undetected neutrino; Momentum conservation requires Same interference producing oscillations in initial and final states
Harry J. Lipkin

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that simple quantum mechanics explains the GSI Darmstadt oscillations in radioactive ion decay without neutrino detection, linking initial and final states through momentum conservation and neutrino coherence.
Contribution
It provides a straightforward quantum mechanical explanation for GSI oscillations, showing that neutrino coherence and momentum conservation suffice without detecting neutrinos.
Findings
Oscillation period yields neutrino mass squared differences.
The model's result differs less than 10% from KamLAND measurements.
Neutrino coherence explains decay oscillations without direct neutrino detection.
Abstract
GSI experiment studying oscillations in K-capture decay of radioactive ion investigates neutrino masses and mixing without detecting neutrino. Even when neutrino is not detected quantum mechanics relates initial and final states. The basic physics is very simple. Neutrinos emitted in beta decay are coherent linear combinations of states with different masses, different momenta and same energy. Since the weak interaction producing the neutrino conserves momentum, the initial state before the transition must also contain a coherent linear combination of states with the same momentum difference and a well defined relative magnitude and phase. A one-particle state with a definite momentum difference also has an easily calculated energy difference. In the time interval between creation of the ion and its decay a linear combination of two states with different energies oscillates in time.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeutrino Physics Research · Atomic and Subatomic Physics Research · Muon and positron interactions and applications
