Neutrino Passes Through Entire Earth, Refuses to Interact With Anyone, Described as 'Relatable'
The ghostly particle traversed 7,900 miles of solid rock without acknowledging a single atom, prompting millions to say 'same.'

A muon neutrino detected at the IceCube Neutrino Observatory in Antarctica on Sunday passed through the entire planet Earth without interacting with a single particle of matter, a feat that social media users have universally described as 'deeply relatable.'
The neutrino, designated IceCube-260207A, entered the Earth's surface near Svalbard, Norway, at approximately 6:14 a.m. UTC and exited near the South Pole 0.042 seconds later, having traversed 7,917 miles of rock, magma, and iron core without so much as a weak-force interaction.
'It passed through roughly 10^42 atoms and ignored every single one,' said Dr. Patricia Lepton of the IceCube collaboration. 'That's a level of avoidance that goes beyond physics into what I can only call a lifestyle choice.'
The neutrino's journey resonated powerfully on social media. The hashtag #BeTheNeutrino trended globally within hours, with users posting statements like 'me at every networking event' and 'this neutrino is my spirit particle.'
Introverts' advocacy groups have formally adopted the neutrino as their mascot. 'For too long, extroversion has been the default,' said the International Association of Quiet People in a whispered press release. 'The neutrino shows us that it is possible to exist in society without participating in it.'
Physicists have noted that neutrinos do occasionally interact with matter — roughly one in ten billion will collide with an atomic nucleus. 'Even the most introverted neutrino will eventually talk to someone,' said Dr. Lepton. 'It just needs the right nucleus. And about a light-year of personal space.'
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