Results of Long-Baseline Neutrino Experiments Based on the Consideration of Frameworks
Md. Farid Ahmed (York University, Toronto, Canada)

TL;DR
This paper analyzes long-baseline neutrino experiment results considering different frameworks, suggesting neutrino speeds may follow Galilean transformations and proposing measurements at different times to detect potential diurnal or annual variations.
Contribution
It introduces a framework-based analysis of neutrino speeds, challenging the standard relativistic assumptions and proposing new experimental tests for neutrino properties.
Findings
Neutrino time-of-flight differences align with Galilean transformation predictions.
Potential diurnal and annual variations in neutrino measurements are suggested.
Neutrino speeds may differ from the speed of light, requiring further testing.
Abstract
In this paper, we present an analysis of the outcomes of long-baseline neutrino experiments based on the consideration of frameworks. Our analysis suggests that the time difference between the time-of-flights corresponding to the speed of light (in vacuum) and that of the neutrino from a source to a detector is within the range of our predicted time difference assuming that the speed of neutrino follows a Galilean transformation. As the ghostly particles called neutrinos have peculiar properties which are still unresolved, so we propose measurements need to be performed at different times of the day to test any diurnal variations (if possible then any annual variations) due to the movement of the Earth.
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeutrino Physics Research · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Particle physics theoretical and experimental studies
