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1
Georeactor Detection with Gigaton Antineutrino
Detectors
  • Neutrinos and Arms Control Workshop
  • February 5, 2004
  • Eugene Guillian
  • University of Hawaii

2
Finding Hidden Nuclear Reactors
  • The focus of this conference is on detecting
    hidden man-made nuclear reactors
  • But there may be a natural nuclear reactor hidden
    in the Earths core!

3
The Georeactor Model
  • An unorthodox model
  • Chief proponent J.M.Herndon
  • The model
  • A fuel breeder fission reactor in the Earths
    sub-core
  • Size 4 miles radius
  • Power 3-10 TW

4
Man-made vs. Geo
  • Man-made
  • (500 reactors) x (2 GW) 1 TW
  • Georeactor
  • 3-10 TW

If a georeactor exists, it will be the dominant
source of antineutrinos!
5
Outline of Presentation
  1. Georeactor detection strategy
  2. Describe the georeactor model
  3. Can a georeactor be detected with KamLAND?
  4. What minimum conditions are necessary to detect a
    georeactor?

6
Strategy for Georeactor Detection
  • If a georeactor does not exist

7
(No Transcript)
8
  • From commercial power plants
  • Depends on the net power output
  • Rate corrected to 100 livetime efficiency
  • Assume no neutrino oscillation

9
  • Corrected to 100 livetime efficiency
  • Neutrino oscillation effect included

10
Slope average neutrino oscillation
survival probability
11
2f Spread
ltRgt Average
12
f Spread
Rmax (1f)ltRgt
Rmin (1-f)ltRgt
ltRgt Average
13
Y-inercept Georeactor Rate
0
14
Strategy for Georeactor Detection
  • If a georeactor does exist

15
10 TW georeactor
16
Nonzero Y-intercept (0.0742 events/day _at_ 10 TW)
17
Georeactor Detection Strategy
  • Plot observed rate against expected background
    rate
  • Fit line through data
  • Y-intercept georeactor rate

18
The Georeactor Model
  • What we can all agree on
  • The Earth is made of the same stuff as meteorites
  • In its earliest stages, the Earth was molten
  • The Earth gradually cooled, leaving all but the
    outer core in solid form

19
Melting a Rock
  • Very high temperature
  • All of rock in liquid form
  • Lower temperature
  • Slag solidifies
  • Alloys and opaque minerals still in liquid form
  • Slag floats

20
Apply This Observation to the Earth
Very Hot!
All Liquid
21
Apply This Observation to the Earth
Cooler
Slag solidifies, Floats to surface
22
Fission Fuel Trapped by Slag?
  • Actinides (U, Th, etc.) are lithophile (or
    oxiphile)
  • If given a chance, they combine with slag
  • Slag rises to surface as the Earth cools
  • Fission fuel found in the Earths crust and
    mantle, not in the core
  • Therefore, a georeactor cannot form!

23
Fission Fuel Trapped by Slag?
  • Actinides (U, Th, etc.) are lithophile (or
    oxiphile)
  • If given a chance, they combine with slag
  • Slag rises to surface as the Earth cools
  • Fission fuel found in the Earths crust and
    mantle, not in the core
  • Therefore, a georeactor cannot form!

If there is enough oxygen
24
If There Were Insufficient Oxygen
  • Some of the U, Th will be in alloy and sulfide
    form
  • These sink as the Earth cools
  • Elements with largest atomic number should sink
    most
  • Therefore, fission fuel should sink to the center
    of the Earth
  • Georeactor can form!

25
How Can One Tell if the Earth Is Oxygen Poor or
Not?
  • Slag has high oxygen content
  • Alloys and opaque minerals have low oxygen
    content
  • Alloy/Slag mass ratio
  • Strong correlation with oxygen content in a
    meteorite

26
Oxygen Level of the Earth
Enstatite Chrondite
Less Slag
Meteorite Data
Alloy Slag
More Slag
Ordinary Chrondite
Low
Oxygen Content
High
27
Oxygen Level of the Earth
Less Slag
Free actinides
Alloy Slag
Actinides trapped in slag
More Slag
Low
Oxygen Content
High
28
Oxygen Level of the Earth
Less Slag
Alloy Slag
Core Mantle

Alloy Slag
More Slag
Low
Oxygen Content
High
29
Oxygen Level of the Earth
Less Slag
Core/Mantle ratio from seismic data
Alloy Slag
More Slag
Low
Oxygen Content
High
30
Measuring the Earths Oxidation Level
  • Equate the following
  • Core ? alloy opaque minerals
  • Mantle Crust ? silicates
  • Obtain Earths mass ratio from density profile
    measured with seismic data
  • Compare with corresponding ratio in meteorites.
  • Oxygen Content of the Earth
  • Same as meteorite with same mass ratio as the
    Earths

31
Evidence for Oxygen-poor Earth
The Earth Seems to be Oxygen-poor!
Herndon, J.M. (1996) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
93, 646-648.
32
3He Evidence for Georeactor
  • Fission reactors produce 3H
  • 3H decays to 3He (half life 12 years)

33
3He Measurements
  • In air
  • RA 3He/4He 1.4 x 10-6
  • From deep Earth
  • R 8 x RA
  • Elevated deep Earth levels difficult to explain
  • Primordial 3He and Just-so dilution scenarios
  • A georeactor naturally produces 3He

34
and Just the Right Amount!
SCALE Reactor Simulator (Oak Ridge)
Deep Earth Measurement (mean and spread)
Fig. 1, J.M.Herndon, Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. USA,
Mar. 18, 2003 (3047)
35
Other Phenomena
  • Georeactor as a fluctuating energy source for
    geomagnetism
  • 3 of the 4 gas giants radiate twice as much heat
    as they receive
  • Oklo natural fission reactor (remnant)

36
Can a Georeactor Be Detected with KamLAND?
  • KamLAND
  • A 0.4 kton antineutrino detector
  • Currently, the largest such detector in the world
  • 2-parameter fit
  • Slope (constrained)
  • Y-intercept (unconstrained)

37
Can a Georeactor Be Detected with KamLAND?
  • KamLAND
  • A 0.4 kton antineutrino detector
  • Currently, the largest such detector in the world
  • 2-parameter fit
  • Slope (constrained)
  • Y-intercept (unconstrained)

Solar neutrino experiments
38
Can a Georeactor Be Detected with KamLAND?
  • KamLAND
  • A 0.4 kton antineutrino detector
  • Currently, the largest such detector in the world
  • 2-parameter fit
  • Slope (constrained)
  • Y-intercept (unconstrained)

Georeactor Rate
39
Measuring the Georeactor Rate with KamLAND
Slope constrained by solar neutrino
measurements
Georeactor rate
Slope 0.75 0.15
40
Large Background
S/B 1/3 1/8
Background
Signal
41
Slope Uncertainty
Best fit
1s uncertainty in solar neutrino oscillation
parameters (Dm2, sin22q) (rough estimate)
42
Can a Georeactor be Detected?
  • Use Error Ellipse to answer this question

43
Ellipse Equation
44
Ellipse Equation
Distance of measured rate from true value
Measured georeactor ne rate (y-intercept)
True georeactor ne rate
45
Ellipse Equation
Distance of measured slope from best estimate
Best estimate of slope (from solar n experiments)
Mueasured slope
46
Ellipse Equation
Correlation between slope and rate measurements
47
Ellipse Equation
Confidence level of fit result
48
Ellipse Equation
Ellipse Parameters
They determine the size of the ellipse
49
Ellipse Equation
Ellipse Parameters
Parameters depend on
Rg Georeactor rate
T Exposure time
ltRgt Average background rate
f Spread in background rate
sm Slope uncertainty
50
Ellipse Parameters
  • ltRgt average background rate
  • f fractional spread of background rate
  • T Exposure time
  • Rg georeactor rate
  • sm oscillation probability uncertainty
  • m0 0.75

51
Error Ellipse for KamLAND, 3 Years
  • ltRgt 0.62 events/day
  • f 16 (i.e. RMS(R)/ltRgt 0.16)
  • T 3 years (12 down time fraction not
    included)
  • Rg 0.0742 events/day (10 TW georeactor)
  • sm 0.15 (slope uncertainty from solar n
    meas.)
  • m0 0.75 (slope avg. surv. prob.)

52
KamLAND, 3 Years
53
KamLAND, How Many Years?
40 years for 90 confidence level!
54
Effect of Background Spread
55
Reducing the Background Level
56
Slope Uncertainty Improvements
57
Detector Size
58
Gigaton Detector
1 Gigaton 2,500,000
59
Gigaton Detector
Go 2.5 km along axis!
60
Summary of Results
  • Georeactor will NOT be observed with KamLAND
  • Large spread in background rate helps
  • Low background level
  • ? Georeactor detectable with small detector

61
Summary of Results
  • Slope uncertainty
  • Improved knowledge helps somewhat
  • A 102 increase in detector size allows
    georeactor detection
  • 1 Gigaton 2.5 million x KamLAND

Most antineutrinos detected by a gigaton
detector will be from the georeactor!
62
Event Rate _at_ Gigaton Detector
  • 0.0742 events/day
  • 0.4 kton
  • 10 TW

x 2,500,000
200,000 events/day
Expected rate from man-made reactors 20,000
ev/day
63
Caveat
  • In this analysis, information from the
    antineutrino energy spectrum was not used.
  • Therefore the statement that KamLAND cannot say
    anything meaningful about a georeactor is
    premature
  • Setting 90 limit may be possible
  • Positive identification, however, is impossible

64
Conclusion
  • An array of gigaton detectors whose primary aim
    is arms control will definitely allow the
    detection of a georeactor (if it exists)
  • The detection of a georeactor will have giant
    repercussions on our understanding of planet
    formation and geophysics

65
Evidence for Oxygen-poor Earth (2)
  • If we accept that the Earth was made from molten
    meteorites, the following mass ratios must hold

Mass(core) Mass(alloys, opaque minerals)
Mass(mantle)
Mass(slag)
Using density profile from seismic data
Meteorite data
66
Evidence for Oxygen-poor Earth (3)
The Earth Seems to be Oxygen-poor!
Herndon, J.M. (1996) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
93, 646-648.
67
Earths Interior from Two Models
68
3He/4He from the Georeactor Model
SCALE Reactor Simulator (Oak Ridge)
Deep Earth Measurement (mean and spread)
Fig. 1, J.M.Herndon, Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. USA,
Mar. 18, 2003 (3047)
69
Detection Strategy
Background (commercial nuclear reactors)
Slope average oscillation survival
probability
Signal (georeactor)
70
Detection Strategy
Slope constrained by solar neutrino
measurements
Georeactor rate
Slope 0.75 0.15
71
Slope Uncertainty
Best fit
1s uncertainty in solar neutrino oscillation
parameters (Dm2, sin22q) (rough estimate)
72
Slope Uncertainty
73
Measuring the Georeactor Power
  • Fit a line through data
  • observed vs. expected rate

b georeactor rate m commercial reactor ne
avg. survival probability m0 best estimate
from solar n experiments sm estimated
uncertainty
xi expected ne rate yi observed ne rate si
stat. err. yi i bin index
74
Measuring the Georeactor Power
  • Fit a line through data
  • observed vs. expected rate

Measure this
b georeactor rate m commercial reactor ne
avg. survival probability m0 best estimate
from solar n experiments sm estimated
uncertainty
xi expected ne rate yi observed ne rate si
stat. err. yi i bin index
75
Line Fit to Data
76
What Conditions are Necessary to Detect a 10 TW
Georeactor?
  • Detector size
  • Signal and background scale by the same factor
  • Exposure time
  • Overall increase in statistics
  • Slope (average survival probability)
  • Uncertainty that is independent of exposure time
  • Improvement over time with more/better solar n
    measurements
  • Commercial reactor background
  • Spread in background level

77
Error Contour Formula
78
Error Contour Formula
  • ltRgt average background rate
  • f fractional spread of background rate
  • T Exposure time
  • Rg georeactor rate
  • sm oscillation probability uncertainty
  • m0 0.75

79
KamLAND, 3 Years
80
KamLAND, How Many Years?
81
Summary of Results
  • Improved knowledge of neutrino oscillation
    parameters help, but not enough to allow KamLAND
    to detect a georeactor
  • A x100 increase in detector size will allow 99
    detection of a 10TW georeactor, even under high
    background conditions as in KamLAND
  • Dont need to go all the way to a gigaton
    (x2000), although it will allow a comfortable
    margin
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