MicroBooNE experiment rules out sterile neutrino

Scientists at Fermilab's MicroBooNE experiment have determined that the long-hypothesized sterile neutrino does not exist, based on high-precision measurements of neutrino behavior. The findings, published in Nature, show neutrinos acting as expected without evidence of a fourth type, closing a decades-old theory. This result paves the way for new investigations and advanced experiments like DUNE.

For decades, physicists have sought explanations for puzzling neutrino behaviors that challenged the Standard Model of particle physics. Anomalies observed in experiments such as the Liquid Scintillator Neutrino Detector (LSND) in the 1990s and MiniBooNE at Fermilab suggested the possible existence of a sterile neutrino—a hypothetical fourth type that interacts differently from the known electron, muon, and tau neutrinos.

"The most popular explanation to these anomalies for the past 30 years has been a hypothetical sterile neutrino," said Justin Evans, a professor at the University of Manchester and co-spokesperson for MicroBooNE.

To test this idea, the MicroBooNE experiment operated from 2015 to 2021 at Fermilab, using a liquid-argon time projection chamber to capture neutrino interactions in detail. Researchers produced muon neutrinos and looked for unexpected appearances of electron neutrinos, which would indicate sterile neutrino involvement. Instead, the data matched predictions from the three-flavor model, with no excess electron neutrinos observed.

"Neutrinos are elusive fundamental particles that are difficult to detect experimentally, yet are among the most abundant particles in the universe," explained David Caratelli, assistant physics professor at UC Santa Barbara and physics coordinator for the analysis. The results, building on a 2025 paper in Physical Review Letters, effectively rule out the sterile neutrino hypothesis.

This development marks a shift in neutrino research. While the original anomalies remain unexplained, scientists are now considering alternatives, such as misidentified photons or new physics. MicroBooNE's techniques have bolstered preparations for the Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment (DUNE) in South Dakota, which will probe deeper questions like matter-antimatter asymmetry.

"One of the key things that MicroBooNE did was give us all confidence and teach us how to use this technology to measure neutrinos with high precision," Caratelli noted. The work was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy and National Science Foundation.

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