U.S. Department of Energy

04/16/2026 | News release | Distributed by Public on 04/16/2026 14:57

Physicists Propose a New Kind of Laser That Would Fire Neutrinos

Physicists Propose a New Kind of Laser That Would Fire Neutrinos

A potential tool could use Bose Einstein condensates to produce intense beams of neutrinos.

Nuclear Physics

April 16, 2026
min minute read time
Artist impression of a trapped radioactive vapor decaying into a coherently-beamed stream of neutrinos (symbolized by v).
Image courtesy of JOSE-LUIS OLIVARES/MIT, ISTOCK

The Science

Physicists have proposed a new way to make neutrinos at accelerated rates. This method would use a state of matter close to absolute zero called a Bose-Einstein condensate. It would harness quantum effects that can produce neutrinos faster than ordinary radioactive decays. This tool would produce a large and controllable beam of neutrinos. They could have similar properties to photons (particles of light) in an optical laser.

The Impact

Neutrinos are fundamental particles that interact extremely weakly with matter. It is very difficult to produce and detect neutrinos. It requires large detectors and powerful sources such as nuclear reactors or particle accelerators. A controllable, coherent source of neutrinos on a bench-top scale would have a significant impact on neutrino research. This type of technology would provide new opportunities to understand their interactions and quantum mechanical properties. In addition, the specific radioactive decays that would enable such a controllable, coherent neutrino source on a small scale could lead to new applications. These applications would include production of rare isotopes for medical physics and neutrino-based communication.

Summary

Lasers have been revolutionary in enabling the development of many aspects of modern science and technology. They are based on the amplification of light via stimulated emission. This is a quantum mechanical process whereby an excited atom is forced to emit a second photon upon absorption of another with the same wavelength. Due to their tiny masses, neutrinos behave similarly to photons in many situations. However, they cannot be used for lasing because their fermionic nature inhibits stimulated emission. For this reason, it is not possible to develop a neutrino laser using this traditional mechanism.

A related but distinct quantum enhancement effect in photons is Dicke superradiance. This is an amplification of the spontaneous emission process through quantum correlations that develop within a gain medium. Unlike lasing, superradiance is possible for fermions. As such, this effect could enable quantum mechanical amplifications of neutrino emission, assuming certain conditions are met. Of all of these conditions, it's particularly important that neutrinos emerging from different atoms are not distinguishable based on their quantum phases. Due to the high energy of neutrinos produced in beta and electron capture decays, this criterion is difficult to meet in ordinary matter. However, scientists can maintain this indistinguishability by using a radioactive Bose Einstein condensate.

This new theoretical work investigates the conditions for coherence and amplification in a superradiant neutrino laser. Scientists found that they could use a realistically sized Bose-Einstein condensate of the radioactive atom rubidium-83 to accelerate neutrino-producing electron capture decays from a half-life of 86.2 days to a few minutes. They could monitor this amplification by capturing the daughter atom krypton-83, which serves as a tracer of the decay rate.

Contact

Ben [email protected]

Joseph [email protected]

Funding

This work is supported by the US Department of Energy's Office of Science, Office of Nuclear Physics and the National Science Foundation.

Publications

B.J.P. Jones and J.A. Formaggio, Superradiant neutrino lasers from radioactive condensates, Phys. Rev. Lett. 135, 111801 (2025) [DOI: 10.1103/l3c1-yg2l]

Related Links

Envisioning a neutrino laser, Physics, Sep 2025

How to make a 'laser' of neutrinos, Nature Research Highlight, Sep 2025

This laser would shoot beams of neutrinos, not light, Science News, Sep 2025

Physicists devise an idea for lasers that shoot beams of neutrinos, MIT News Sep 2025

U.S. Department of Energy published this content on April 16, 2026, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on April 16, 2026 at 20:57 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]