Billions of neutrinos pass unnoticed through your body every second.

100 Trillion Neutrinos Pass Through You Every Second

1k viewsPosted 11 years agoUpdated 1 hour ago

Right now, as you read this sentence, approximately 100 trillion neutrinos are passing through your body. Not in an hour. Not in a minute. Every single second. And you don't feel a thing.

These ghostly particles are so abundant that about 60 billion neutrinos from the Sun alone pierce through every square centimeter of Earth—including you—each second. If your body presents roughly 10,000 square centimeters to the Sun, that's 600 trillion solar neutrinos zipping through you in the time it takes to read this paragraph.

The Ultimate Trespassers

Neutrinos are subatomic particles with almost no mass and no electric charge, which makes them spectacularly good at ignoring everything in their path. While photons (light particles) bounce off your skin and atoms make up your physical form, neutrinos pass through matter like it isn't even there.

How elusive are they? A neutrino could travel through light-years of solid lead without hitting anything. For context, a light-year is about 6 trillion miles. Imagine a wall of lead stretching from Earth to beyond our solar system—neutrinos would sail right through it.

Where Do They Come From?

The neutrinos bombarding you right now have diverse origins:

  • The Sun: Nuclear fusion in the Sun's core produces the majority of neutrinos reaching Earth
  • Cosmic rays: When high-energy particles from space smash into Earth's atmosphere, they create atmospheric neutrinos
  • Earth itself: Radioactive decay in our planet's crust generates geoneutrinos
  • Distant supernovae: When massive stars explode, they unleash floods of neutrinos that traverse entire galaxies

Some neutrinos passing through you right now might have originated from stellar explosions that happened millions of years ago in distant galaxies.

Will One Ever Hit You?

Despite the staggering numbers, neutrino interactions with your body are vanishingly rare. Scientists calculate that with 100 trillion neutrinos passing through you every second, you have about a 1 in 150 chance per year that a single neutrino will actually interact with an atom in your body.

Over an average human lifetime, your odds improve to roughly 1 in 4 that you'll experience at least one neutrino interaction. When it does happen, you won't feel it—the interaction occurs at the subatomic level and is completely harmless.

Catching Ghosts

Because neutrinos are so reluctant to interact with matter, detecting them requires enormous underground detectors filled with thousands of tons of ultra-pure water or ice. The IceCube Neutrino Observatory at the South Pole, for example, uses a cubic kilometer of Antarctic ice as a detector. Even with that massive volume, scientists only capture a handful of neutrino interactions per day.

These heroic detection efforts are worth it, though. Neutrinos carry information about cosmic events that other particles can't deliver. They help scientists understand everything from the nuclear reactions powering stars to the most violent explosions in the universe—and they do it all while quietly, invisibly, passing through everything in their way.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many neutrinos pass through the human body?
Approximately 100 trillion neutrinos pass through your body every second, with about 60 billion per second coming from the Sun alone for every square centimeter of your body.
Can neutrinos harm you?
No, neutrinos are completely harmless. They have almost no mass, no charge, and interact so rarely with matter that the vast majority pass through your body without touching a single atom.
Has a neutrino ever hit a person?
Statistically, each person has about a 1 in 150 chance per year that a single neutrino will interact with an atom in their body. Over a lifetime, there's roughly a 1 in 4 chance of at least one interaction—but you'd never feel it.
Why can neutrinos pass through everything?
Neutrinos have almost no mass and no electric charge, so they don't interact with electromagnetic forces or feel the strong nuclear force. This allows them to pass through light-years of solid matter without hitting anything.
Where do neutrinos come from?
Neutrinos come from nuclear fusion in the Sun, cosmic rays hitting Earth's atmosphere, radioactive decay in Earth's crust, and distant astronomical events like supernovae. The Sun is the primary source of neutrinos reaching Earth.

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