1. Introduction
Neutrinos and antineutrinos are the most elusive and mysterious elementary particles in contemporary physics. We begin our paper with a brief review of the properties of these particles. Neutrinos are always observed to have left-handed helicity (the spin angular momentum is directed opposite to the linear momentum), while antineutrinos always have right-handed helicity (the spin angular momentum is directed parallel to the linear momentum). The precise nature of the difference between a neutrino and an antineutrino is unresolved. A real distinction exists if the neutrino and the antineutrino are spin ½ “Dirac fermions”. In this case the neutrino and antineutrino are different particles, described by different quantum fields. However, these two particles may also be spin ½ “Majorana fermions”, described by the same quantum field. In this case neutrinos and antineutrinos are the same particles with different helicities, analogous to left and right-circularly polarized photons.
There are three different flavors (i.e., types) of neutrinos and antineutrinos: electron, muon, and tau. The most abundant in the Universe are, probably, the relic neutrinos, which decoupled from the other fundamental particles about 1 s after the Big Bang. The relic neutrinos are expected to contain all three flavors in approximately equal proportion [
1]. Currently, the energy of these relic neutrinos is insufficient for their direct detection. However, the relic neutrinos influence the spatial fluctuations of the cosmic microwave background, and this influence was detected [
2].
Nuclear reactors generate large numbers of electron antineutrinos. The fission of heavy nuclei, e.g.,
235U, produces neutron-rich daughter nuclei, which undergo beta-decay:
Here Z is the atomic number of the parent nucleus and e
- and
are the electron and the electron antineutrino. This reaction shows that, inside the nucleus, a neutron decays into a proton while radiating an electron and an electron antineutrino. On a more fundamental level, inside the neutron, a down quark (d) with negative electric charge (-1/3)e transforms into an up quark (u) with positive charge (2/3)e while radiating a W
- boson of charge (-e). The W
- boson mediates the weak interaction. It decays by radiating an electron and an electron antineutrino. Due to such beta-decays, about 4.5% of the fission energy released in nuclear reactors is radiated away as electron antineutrinos [
3]. First observed in the 1950s, these antineutrinos are now detected routinely. The maximum energy of an antineutrino radiated by nuclear reactors is about 10 MeV. Radioactive isotopes present in the Earth, e.g.,
238U, also produce electron antineutrinos in beta decay processes [
4].
Collisions between cosmic rays (typically protons) and atoms in the atmosphere generate atmospheric neutrinos and antineutrinos of both electron and muon flavors, with a wide range of energies up to at least 200 TeV [
5]. The process of generation is the following. Byproducts of such collisions, e.g., positively charged pions, decay into positively charged antimuons μ
+ and muon neutrinos ν
μ:
A positively charged pion, or pi meson, has zero spin and consists of an up quark (u) of charge (2/3)e and a down antiquark
of charge (1/3)e: π
+ = u
. In the same way, a negatively charged antipion π
-, which consists of up antiquark and down quark, decays into a negatively charged muon μ
- and a muon antineutrino
. A muon decays into an electron, a muon neutrino, and an electron antineutrino, while an antimuon decays into a positron (antielectron), an electron neutrino, and a muon antineutrino:
A typical particle accelerator may produce a beam of muon neutrinos and antineutrinos with energies in the range from MeV to GeV [
6]. For example, if an accelerated proton beam hits a stationary target, positively charged pions π
+ are produced and can be separated from other particles. Then, the positively charged pions decay in flight into antimuons μ
+ and muon neutrinos, as shown in formula (2). At the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), neutrinos and antineutrinos of all flavors with energies in the TeV region have been detected in the ForwArd Search ExpeRiment (FASER) [
7]. In the LHC, two counter-propagating beams of protons collide producing other hadrons (particles composed from quarks and antiquarks) which decay producing neutrinos and antineutrinos, similar to the processes shown in formulas (2) and (3).
The largest source of neutrinos near the Earth’s surface is the core of the Sun [
8]. The nuclear reaction generating the overwhelming majority of solar neutrinos is the fusion of two protons into a deuteron
2H, which contains one proton and one neutron. This reaction generates a positron and an electron neutrino:
The energy of the solar neutrinos produced by this reaction (“pp neutrinos”) is relatively small (below 420 keV) but other nuclear reactions occurring in the core of the Sun produce neutrinos of energy up to 18 MeV [
8]. Neutrinos and antineutrinos with energies below 100 MeV are also generated during the core collapse of massive stars [
9]. In the process of the collapse, protons and electrons fuse, forming neutrons while radiating electron neutrinos. Also, the initial temperature of the collapsed core is very high (about 10
11 K), and thermal energy is converted into neutrinos through pair production of neutrinos and antineutrinos of all the flavors.
An intriguing property of the different neutrino flavors is that each flavor, where α denotes a flavor (α = e,μ,τ), is a superposition of at least three “neutrino mass states”, which for simplicity we denote as , , and . The mass states are the states with definite rest mass values, labeled m1, m2, and m3. A major consequence of this property is the phenomenon of neutrino oscillations. During flight through free space, a neutrino of one flavor may transform into another flavor. For example, the muon neutrino produced in a pion decay may transform in flight into an electron or a tau neutrino. In order to understand neutrino oscillations, it is instructive to consider an analogy with electron spin precession.
Consider a neutral atom in an electronic ground S-state with a single unpaired electron (e.g., lithium) passing through a Stern-Gerlach apparatus which measures the x-component of the atomic spin. After passing through the Stern-Gerlach apparatus, the electron spin of the atom points either in the positive or negative x-direction. We can call these two states the (+x) flavor (
+
state) and (-x) flavor (
-
state). Suppose that after passing through the Stern-Gerlach apparatus, the spin has the (+x) flavor. Let the atom then propagate through a region where a magnetic field points in the negative z-direction. (We choose the negative z-direction for the magnetic field because in the ground state, the electron spin points opposite to the magnetic field.) In the magnetic field, the “energy states”
and
, which correspond to the definite values of energy, correspond to the (+z) and (-z) spin directions. The original spin flavor (+x) is then a superposition of the two energy states:
When the atom experiences the magnetic field, its spin state
must change because the flavor state
+
is not a stationary energy state:
Here, ω = γ
eB is the frequency of the Larmor precession, which is equal to the transition frequency between the electron spin states
and
, γ
e is the electron gyromagnetic ratio, and B is the magnitude of the magnetic field. If one uses a second Stern-Gerlach device to measure the flavor of the spin at a distance (d) from the first apparatus, the probability to get the (+x) flavor will be P+ = cos
2(ωd/2v), where v is the speed of the atom, and the time t in expression (6) equals d/v. Correspondingly, the probability to observe the (-x) flavor P- = sin
2(ωd/2v). The phase difference ωt between the two energy states increases with distance d, and the two probabilities oscillate. For example, with ωd/2v = π/4, the probability to observe the (-x) spin flavor is P- = P+ = ½, and for, ωd/2v = π/2, we have P+ = 0, P- = 1, i.e., the +x flavor changes to the -x flavor.
Just as happens in the case of an electron spin propagating in a magnetic field, when neutrinos propagate in free space, the phase differences between the mass states change, which is detectable as a change in the neutrino flavor. However, unlike the oscillations of the “spin flavor”, in the case of neutrino oscillations we have not two, but three mass states with definite values of rest energy m
kc
2, where k = 1, 2, 3. The important consequence of neutrino oscillations is that they represent a significant deviation from the Standard Model of particle physics [
10]. In the Standard Model, neutrinos have zero rest mass (like a photon) and all propagate with the speed of light.
Mathematically, the neutrino flavor states are expressed in terms of the mass states using the 3x3 lepton mixing matrix U
αk [
11]:
In this and following expressions, the sum is taken over the mass index k = 1, 2, 3. If a neutrino is created in the flavor state
, the probability of observing it in a flavor state
is given by the expression:
Here d is the distance from the neutrino source and E is the total relativistic neutrino energy. Note that equation (8) was derived assuming the ultra-relativistic limit: m
kc
2 << E.
Neutrino oscillation experiments reliably indicate that the three mass states have squared rest energy differences Δ(m
2c
4) ≈ 7.4x10
-5 (eV)
2 and Δ(m
2c
4) ≈ 2.5x10
-3 (eV)
2 [
12]. This implies that the mass states have a maximum rest energy greater than 50 meV. Analysis of the available cosmological data provides the following bounds on the sum of the masses of these states: 60 meV < (m
1 + m
2 + m
3)c
2 < 110 meV [
13]. The measurement of the absolute value of the neutrino and antineutrino masses is a notoriously complicated problem. The most advanced Karlsruhe Tritium Neutrino (KATRIN) experiment measures the energy distribution of electrons emitted in the process of tritium beta decay. The latest report gives an upper limit for the electron antineutrino rest energy of 450 meV [
14]. Note that there are two possible arrangements for the values of the mass states: 1) m
1 < m
2 < m
3 (normal ordering), and 2) m
3 < m
1 < m
2 (inverted ordering). For both orderings the minimum mass difference refers to the difference between m
1 and m
2: c
4(m
22 – m
12) ≈ 7.4x10
-5 (eV)
2. Current experiments cannot determine which ordering is correct.
A non-zero neutrino mass poses serious challenges for the theory of neutrinos. First of all, for massless particles, the helicity, i.e., the spin component relative to the particle’s momentum, is equivalent to chirality, which is a fundamental property associated with the asymmetry between a quantum field and its mirror image [
15]. For a massive particle, which moves with a speed less than the speed of light, the helicity depends on the reference frame, while the chirality does not depend on the reference frame. The weak interaction generates Dirac neutrinos of definite chirality: left-handed Dirac neutrinos and right-handed Dirac antineutrinos. In principle, for a massive neutrino, the helicity may be different from the chirality, i.e., the weak interaction may produce neutrinos with left-handed chirality but right-handed helicity. However, for ultra-relativistic neutrinos (m
kc
2 << E) the probability of this event is negligible. Secondly, unlike helicity, the chirality of a massive free neutrino is not conserved. Thus, a neutrino with left-handed chirality and left-handed helicity, while moving through free space, may transform into a neutrino with right-handed chirality and left-handed helicity. A neutrino with right-handed chirality does not participate in the weak interaction. Again, the probability of this transformation is negligible for ultra-relativistic neutrinos. In conclusion, for ultra-relativistic neutrinos and antineutrinos, one can safely ignore the fundamental difference between chirality and helicity.
Various extensions of the Standard Model of particle physics predict the existence of additional flavors of right-handed “sterile neutrinos” and left-handed “sterile antineutrinos,” which do not participate in the weak interaction [
16,
17,
18]. While difficult to estimate, the rest masses of sterile neutrinos are expected to be much greater than the mean rest masses of the “active neutrinos”, i.e., the electron, muon and tau neutrinos. If neutrinos are Majorana fermions, then in nuclear decays the active Majorana neutrinos with left-handed chirality could be generated with a small admixture of sterile neutrinos with right-handed chirality.
The search for sterile neutrinos is an important area of research. Experiments with the Los Alamos Liquid Scintillator Detector (LSND) and the Mini Booster Neutrino Experiment (MiniBooNE) indicated the existence of sterile neutrinos with rest energy about 1 eV, but these results were not confirmed by other experiments [
19]. The well-known cosmic X-ray line radiation, with energy of approximately 3.5 keV, was found to be consistent with dark matter sterile neutrinos of 7 keV rest energy [
20]. The constraints on sterile neutrinos with rest energy in MeV – GeV scale are discussed, for example, in ref. [
21]. In our paper we will concentrate on the search for sterile neutrinos using electron capture beta-decay.
In electron capture beta decay, an atomic nucleus of atomic number Z and electric charge Ze absorbs an electron from one of the atomic S-orbitals, transforming into a nucleus of atomic number (Z – 1) and radiating an electron neutrino:
This means that a proton in the nucleus absorbs an electron, transforms into a neutron, and radiates an electron neutrino. On a more fundamental level, due to the weak interaction, an up quark in the proton absorbs an electron and transforms into a down quark while radiating an electron neutrino. It has been suggested that the electron neutrino radiated in this process may have a small admixture of a sterile neutrino [
22]. Indeed, assume that the mass of the sterile neutrino is smaller than the nuclear decay energy released in the capture process (i.e., the Q value). Also, assume that the change of the recoil energy, associated with the radiation of a sterile rather than an active electron neutrino, is much greater than the measurement uncertainty of the recoil energy. Under these conditions we may detect the emission of a massive sterile neutrino. Even if the amplitude of the sterile neutrino in the original wave function is very small, there will be a finite probability that the atom radiates a heavy sterile neutrino. In this case, the recoil energy of the daughter atom will be smaller than that in the case of radiation of an electron neutrino. In ref. [
22] the authors reported a search for sterile neutrinos of rest energy from 370 keV to 640 keV using the electron capture beta decay
37Ar →
37Cl. In this decay, the atomic number Z changes from 18 to 17. The recoil energies of the daughter
37Cl atoms were measured in the region of 3.6 eV to 7.6 eV. Electron capture beta decays
7Be →
7Li and
131Cs →
131Xe have been identified as the best candidates for the search of sterile neutrinos [
23]. In particular,
7Be is the lightest atom which decays by electron capture. The daughter
7Li atom has a relatively large recoil energy, which is very important in the search for a sterile neutrino.
Improvements in detector technology and the ability to implant radioisotopes directly into the detectors has triggered a resurgence of nuclear recoil experiments (see for example [
24]). In ref. [
25], the authors used the Isotope Separator and Accelerator (ISAC) in Vancouver, Canada, to implant
7Be atoms into superconducting tunnel junction sensors (STJ). In a STJ, two superconductors are separated by a barrier, like in a Josephson junction. When a daughter
7Li atom deposits its recoil energy in the detector, electrons are excited above the small (about 1 meV) superconducting energy gap. The increase in current due to the excited electrons is proportional to the recoil energy. This technique allowed the authors of [
25] to carry out a search for sterile neutrinos with rest energy in the region of 100 keV to 850 keV.
In this paper we report a comprehensive analysis of the two channels of 7Be electron capture beta decay. In the first (one-step) channel, the 7Be nucleus captures an electron and decays to the nuclear ground state of the daughter 7Li atom radiating a neutrino. In the second (two-step) channel, the 7Be nucleus captures an electron and decays to the excited state of the 7Li nucleus radiating a neutrino and then the 7Li nucleus transfers to its ground state, radiating a γ-ray photon. For both channels, we find the recoil energy assuming radiation of a massive neutrino. We derive analytical expressions for the recoil energy and discuss opportunities for searches for sterile neutrinos in electron capture beta decays.