Effect of Reactor Neutrinos on Beta-Decay

The pulsed nuclear reactor was used to measure the effect of neutrinos on the beta-decay of 90 Sr/ 90 Y nuclei. This measurement shows that some increase in the decay rate occurs in a few tens of milliseconds after reactor flashes.


Beta-Decay
The state of radioactive nuclei is energetically unstable. At decay, they pass from a certain excited state to a state with lower energy.
The question arises: what is the reason that at the some moment there is a decay of a particular nucleus? And in general, is such a deterministic approach to this problem legitimate?
The assumption that the cause of the decay of radioactive nuclei may be their interaction with the neutrino flux was repeatedly expressed earlier [1] [2] [3].
It can be assumed that in order to cause a radioactive decay occurring with the energy releasing, a quasi-elastic collision of neutrino with a nucleus is enough.
The electromagnetic model of neutron [4] allows to calculate all its main parameters-mass, spin, magnetic moment, decay energy. Only the time of its life defies calculation. According to this model, proton and electron forming the neutron are bound by electromagnetic forces. These forces do not carry any mechanism of degrada-tion of the bound state. There is no internal cause that could cause the loss of stability of neutron and its decay. Therefore, we can assume that β-decay is a forced phenomenon that occurs under the external influence of the neutrino flux.
This assumption can be verified if the correlation between the neutron lifetime or the rate of the nuclei β-decay and the intensity of the neutrino flux incident on them can be studied.

The Neutron Time of Life
Careful measurements of the neutron lifetime were carried out repeatedly. The results of these measurements, carried out at different reactors, differ markedly.
According to measurements made in the past century at relatively small reactors, the average neutron lifetime is 885.7 ± 0.8 s [5].
In 2005, these measurements were repeated on the powerful research reactor in Grenoble.
These measurements showed that the neutron lifetime is equal to 878.5 ± 0.7 ± 0.3 sec [5].
It can be assumed that the discrepancy is caused by a more powerful neutrino flux of the Grenoble reactor.

The Effect of Solar Neutrinos on β-Decay
Extremely interesting results were published by E. Fischbach, J. H. Jenkins et al. [1].
According to experiments conducted earlier at different times and in different countries of the world, the nuclear decay rate under terrestrial conditions is variable. It depends on the Earth-Sun distance.
Summarizing these measurement data, authors [1] expressed a hypothesis about the possible influence of the solar neutrino flux on the nuclear decay rate.
Proceeding from the Fischbach-Jenkins assumption, then the rate of measured in our laboratories beta-decay should change throughout the year due to the movement of the Earth in the elliptical orbit around the Sun. Since the difference between the distances to the Sun at perihelion and aphelion is about 3.5%, then the corresponding solid angle of the earth laboratory changes by approximately 7% at the same time. If the β-decay of nuclei would be caused only by the solar neutrino flux, then we can expect that the rate of β-decay in the terrestrial laboratory must be modulated to a depth of 7% with a period equal to year.
It is remarkable that the experiments basically confirmed the Fischbach-Jenkins theory. The decay rate of a number of nuclei really turned out to be sinusoidally modulated with a period equal to year.
The only difference was that the modulation depth was about 10 times smaller.

The Flux of Reactor Neutrinos
Neutrinos emitted by nuclear reactors usually have fluxes that are much smaller than cosmic neutrinos, but the energy of reactor neutrinos is higher [7]. In our experiment, the pulse reactor IBR-2 (Dubna) was used as the neutrino source. Its average power was equal to The duration of the flash was equal to 300 mks. f τ ≈ As fission of one nucleus into nuclear fuel releases energy [7] [8] 200 MeV the reactor produces acts of fission per second. The mechanism leads to the generation of neutrinos in the fission reaction, due to the fact that β-active nuclei born as fragments of the fuel fission.
However, basically these fragments in our case can be considered as long-lived because their half-life is longer than the period between our reactor flashes r τ . Neutrinos emitted during the decay of these β-active nuclei are not "tied" to a specific reactor flash.
They created in our experiment a small increase in the background. There are few short-lived isotopes that have a half-life of 1 2 r T τ < [9]. These are, for example, the nuclei 12 B ( 1 2 20 ms T ≈ ). If we assume that one act of plutonium fission produces one short-lived isotope, emitting one neutrino during its decay, then the flux of these neutrinos react Φ in the experimental hall of the reactor at a distance of about 20 meters from its core will be only a small part of the flux of cosmic neutrinos (Equation (2)):  The discriminator that sets the threshold for recording photomultiplier pulses played an important role in the setup we used (Figure 1). The nuclei of strontium-90 at beta-decay starts a chain of transformations: The energy distribution of beta electrons in this chain is shown in Figure 2.
The presence of a significant difference in the energy of beta-electrons formed during the decay of 90 Sr and 90 Y atoms gives rise to the assumption that the effect of reactor neutrinos on these decays may also be different.
In order to register this difference, the influence of reactor neutrinos on beta-decay was measured at different levels of beta-electron pulse energy discrimination ( Figure 3). The exponential component of the complete set of measured data was obtained by computer calculation.
It should be noted that curve 5 in Figure 3 when constructed on a large scale is also an exponent with a small pre-exponential multiplier.

Experimental Equipment and Measurement Results
In our experiment, the search was made for a correlation between the rate of β-decay of 90 Sr/ 90 Y isotopes and activity pulses of nuclear reactor. For this, the β-electrons emitted by 90 Sr/ 90 Y nuclei were recorded by a scintillator equipped with a photomultiplier (Figure 1). Electronics made it possible to amplify and discriminate photomultiplier pulses before registering them. The radiation-sensitive part of the apparatus was protected from direct penetration of neutrons and γ-quanta from reactor with the help of a small box made of lead bricks and borated polyethylene.
The measuring system was located at a distance of about 20 meters from the core of a pulsed reactor.
Preliminary measurements showed that in the absence of the β-source, the measuring system, when the reactor is operating, gives false positives no more than once every few minutes.
Additional measurements have shown that this phenomenon is absent when the reactor is switched off and the beta-source creates a statistically uniform count in all channels.
The measurement results are shown in Figure 3. From these data it can be seen that, at the reactor flash, there is indeed some visible increase of beta-decays intensity.

Conclusions
Thus, the results of measurements show that the flux of reactor neutrinos does Journal of Modern Physics indeed have some quite noticeable effect on the phenomenon of beta-decay.
At that, the value of the ratio of flows is close to This confirms the point of view on this problem that the phenomenon of beta-decay is a consequence of the neutrino flux action.
The discovered phenomenon of the impact of reactor neutrinos on beta-decay suggests that the modern approach to the problem of beta-decay should be revised. Many scientists dealing with this problem have argued that the theory of beta-decay in its present state is unsatisfactory [10]. Naturally, the fact that the beta-decay is a consequence of the impact of neutrino flux on nuclei requires the creation of a new theory of this phenomenon.
The author is sincerely grateful to Valery V. Zhuravlev for careful measurements at the reactor IBR-2 and to Evgeny P. Shabalin for discussing the problem of short-lived isotopes.

Conflicts of Interest
The author declares no conflicts of interest regarding the publication of this paper.