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Neutrinos from the primary proton–proton fusion process in the Sun

Abstract

In the core of the Sun, energy is released through sequences of nuclear reactions that convert hydrogen into helium. The primary reaction is thought to be the fusion of two protons with the emission of a low-energy neutrino. These so-called pp neutrinos constitute nearly the entirety of the solar neutrino flux, vastly outnumbering those emitted in the reactions that follow. Although solar neutrinos from secondary processes have been observed, proving the nuclear origin of the Sun’s energy and contributing to the discovery of neutrino oscillations, those from proton–proton fusion have hitherto eluded direct detection. Here we report spectral observations of pp neutrinos, demonstrating that about 99 per cent of the power of the Sun, 3.84 × 1033 ergs per second, is generated by the proton–proton fusion process.

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Figure 1: Solar neutrino energy spectrum.
Figure 2: Energy spectra for all the solar neutrino and radioactive background components.
Figure 3: Fit of the energy spectrum between 165 and 590 keV.

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Acknowledgements

The Borexino program is made possible by funding from the INFN (Italy); the NSF (USA); the BMBF, DFG and MPG (Germany); the JINR; the RFBR, RSC and NRC Kurchatov Institute (Russia); and the NCN (Poland). We acknowledge the support of the Laboratori Nazionali del Gran Sasso (Italy).

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Authors and Affiliations

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Contributions

The Borexino detector was designed, constructed and commissioned by the Borexino Collaboration over the span of more than 15 years. The Borexino Collaboration sets the science goals. Scintillator purification and handling, source calibration campaigns, PMT and electronics operations, signal processing and data acquisition, Monte Carlo simulations of the detector, and data analyses were performed by Borexino Collaboration members, who also discussed and approved the scientific results. The manuscript was prepared by a subgroup of authors appointed by the collaboration and subject to an internal collaboration-wide review process. All authors reviewed and approved the final version of the manuscript.

Corresponding author

Correspondence to O. Smirnov.

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The author declare no competing financial interests.

Extended data figures and tables

Extended Data Figure 1 The Borexino detector.

The characteristic onion-like structure of the detector22 is displayed, with fluid volumes of increasing radiological purity towards the centre of the detector. Although solar neutrino measurements are made using events whose positions fall inside the innermost volume of scintillator (the fiducial volume, shown as spherical for illustrative purposes only), the large mass surrounding it is necessary to shield against environmental radioactivity. The water tank (17 m high) contains about 2,100 t of ultraclean water. The diameter of the stainless steel sphere is 13.7 m, and that of the thin nylon inner vessel containing the scintillator is 8.5 m. The buffer and target scintillator masses are 889 and 278 t, respectively.

Extended Data Figure 2 Survival probability of electron-neutrinos produced by the different nuclear reactions in the Sun.

All the numbers are from Borexino (this paper for pp, ref. 17 for 7Be, ref. 18 for pep and ref. 19 for 8B with two different thresholds at 3 and 5 MeV). 7Be and pep neutrinos are mono-energetic. pp and 8B are emitted with a continuum of energy, and the reported P(νe → νe) value refers to the energy range contributing to the measurement. The violet band corresponds to the ±1σ prediction of the MSW-LMA solution25. It is calculated for the 8B solar neutrinos, considering their production region in the Sun which represents the other components well. The vertical error bars of each data point represent the ±1σ interval; the horizontal uncertainty shows the neutrino energy range used in the measurement.

Extended Data Figure 3 The sequence of nuclear fusion reactions defining the pp chain in the Sun.

The pp neutrinos start the sequence 99.76% of the time.

Extended Data Figure 4 Study of the low energy part of the spectrum.

Comparison of the spectrum obtained with the main trigger (black) and by selecting events falling in the late part of the acquisition window triggered by preceding events (red). Above 45 struck PMTs, the spectral shapes coincide. The threshold effect for self-triggered events (black) is clear. The residual threshold effect at lower energy in the red curve is due to the finite efficiency for identifying very low-energy events within a triggered data window.

Extended Data Figure 5 14C spectrum, and residuals, obtained from events triggered by a preceding event.

a, Spectrum. b, Relative residuals of a fit with the 14C β-emission spectrum (in units of standard deviations). The error bars thus represent ±1σ intervals.

Extended Data Figure 6 Energy spectrum of the pile-up data for the standard cuts.

The small bump around 150 struck PMTs (400 keV in Figs 2 and 3) is due to the pile-up of 14C with 210Po; at lower energies, pile-up is dominated by 14C+14C, and by 14C+dark noise.

Extended Data Figure 7 Energy distribution of events collected with no threshold applied.

The events correspond to regular, solicited triggers (sliced into 230 ns windows). This represents what the detector measures when randomly sampled. In an alternative treatment of pile-up, this spectrum is used to smear each spectral component used in the fit (see text for details).

Extended Data Figure 8 Distribution of best-fit values for the pp neutrino interaction rate.

Values are obtained by varying the fit conditions, including the fit energy range, synthetic-versus-analytic pile-up spectral shape, and energy estimator. The distribution shown is peaked around our reported value of 144 c.p.d. per 100 t.

Extended Data Figure 9 Goodness of fit versus pp neutrino interaction rate.

The χ2 minimum is at our reported value of 144 c.p.d. per 100 t.

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Borexino Collaboration. Neutrinos from the primary proton–proton fusion process in the Sun. Nature 512, 383–386 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1038/nature13702

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