HomeScienceGlobal neutrino study brings scientists closer to solving the universe’s biggest mystery of existence

Global neutrino study brings scientists closer to solving the universe’s biggest mystery of existence

Neutrinos are among the universe’s most abundant yet least understood particles. They possess tiny masses and almost never interact with other matter.

October 30, 2025 / 16:09 IST
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Inside Japan’s Super-Kamiokande neutrino detector. (Image: Kamioka Observatory, ICRR (Institute for Cosmic Ray Research), The University of Tokyo)
Inside Japan’s Super-Kamiokande neutrino detector. (Image: Kamioka Observatory, ICRR (Institute for Cosmic Ray Research), The University of Tokyo)

Could the answer to why our universe exists lie within ghostlike particles that rarely interact with matter? A global team of scientists believes they are closer to finding out.

T2K and NOvA Combine Forces Across Continents
For the first time, researchers from Japan’s T2K experiment and the United States’ NOvA experiment have merged their data to study how neutrinos change type as they travel. Their findings, published in Nature, mark a major step towards understanding why matter triumphed over antimatter after the Big Bang.

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The joint analysis, co-led by Michigan State University (MSU) physicist Kendall Mahn, revealed some of the most accurate measurements of neutrino behaviour to date. “This was a big victory for our field,” said Mahn. “It shows we can work together to explore neutrinos in new ways.”

Both experiments fire intense beams of neutrinos through near and far detectors to track their transformations. Though T2K and NOvA share similar scientific goals, their distances and energies differ, making their data complementary. By combining their results, scientists managed to achieve higher precisions than any one of them could have done alone.