The Free Press Journal

Scientists from Canada, Japan win Physics Nobel

Takaaki Kajita and Arthur McDonald share the prize for work on Neutrinos

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Takaaki Kajita of Japan and Arthur McDonald of Canada won the Nobel Prize in physics for discoverin­g the "chameleon-like" nature of neutrinos, work that yielded the crucial insight that the tiny particles have mass, reports PTI.

The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences said the two researcher­s had made key contributi­ons to experiment­s showing that neutrinos change identities as they whiz through the universe at nearly the speed of light.

Neutrinos are miniscule particles created in nuclear reactions, such as in the sun and the stars, or in nuclear power plants.

There are three kinds of neutrinos and the laureates showed they oscillate from one kind to another, dispelling the long-held notion that they were massless.

"The discovery has changed our understand­ing of the innermost workings of matter and can prove crucial to our view of the universe," the academy said.

Kajita, 56, is director of the Institute for Cosmic Ray Research and professor at the University of Tokyo. McDonald, 72, is a professor emeritus at Queen's University in Kingston, Canada. The winners will split the 8 million Swedish kronor (about $ 960,000) prize money. Each winner also gets a diploma and a gold medal at the prize ceremony on December 10.

Kajita and McDonald made their discoverie­s while working at the Super-Kamiokande detector in Japan and Sudbury Neutrino Observator­y in Canada, respective­ly.

Kajita showed in 1998 that neutrinos captured at the detector underwent a metamorpho­sis in the atmosphere, the academy said. Three years later McDonald found that neutrinos coming from the sun also switched identities.

McDonald told a news conference in Stockholm by telephone that the eureka moment was when it became clear that his experiment had proven with great accuracy that neutrinos changed from one type to another in traveling from the sun to Earth.

Asked how he felt when he realised today that his work was suddenly going to receive the world's focus, McDonald said, "It's a very daunting experience, needless to say." McDonald said that scientists would still like to know what the actual mass of the neutrino is. And experiment­s are looking at whether there are other types of neutrinos beyond the three clearly observed.

The University of Tokyo said in a statement congratula­ting Kajita that he was one of the students of 2002 Nobel physics winner Masatoshi Koshiba, who also has contribute­d to Japan's neutrino research.

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