Interactions News Wire #16-05
4 March 2005 http://www.interactions.org
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Source: Fermilab
Content: Press Release
Date Issued: 4 March 2005
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05-07
March 4, 2005
Press contact: Mike
Perricone, Fermilab Public Affairs, 630-840-3351,
mikep@fnal.gov
Photos are available at
http://www.fnal.gov/pub/presspass/press_releases/NuMI_photos
More
information on the NuMI/MINOS project is at
http://www-numi.fnal.gov/
MINOS Neutrino Experiment Launched at Fermilab
BATAVIA, Illinois - Officials at the Department of Energy's Fermi National
Accelerator Laboratory today (March 4, 2005) dedicated the MINOS
experiment and the beam that will send subatomic particles called
neutrinos from Fermilab, near Chicago, to a particle detector in
Minnesota. The Honorable J. Dennis Hastert Jr., Speaker of the U.S. House
of Representatives, and Dr. Raymond L. Orbach, Director of the DOE Office
of Science, officially inaugurated the Main Injector Neutrino Oscillation
Search (MINOS) experiment. The Speaker unveiled the beam to send the first
pulses of neutrinos on a path through the earth from Fermilab to a
detector located 450 miles away, a half-mile underground in the historic
Soudan iron mine in northeastern of Minnesota.
"With the MINOS experiment, Fermilab again demonstrates its position as
the world's premier facility to conduct particle physics research," Rep.
Hastert said. "With the new knowledge it generates on neutrinos, Fermilab
will expand the frontiers of understanding about our universe and the way
it works, and build on a reputation established over 30 years of
outstanding science and discovery."
The Neutrinos at the Main Injector (NuMI) project, with the MINOS
experiment, includes over 200 scientists, engineers, technical specialists
and students from 32 institutions in 6 countries, including Brazil,
France, Greece, Russia, the United Kingdom and the United States. The
institutions include universities and national laboratories. The U.S.
Department of Energy provides the major share of the funding, with
additional funding from the U.S. National Science Foundation and from the
United Kingdom's Particle Physics and Astronomy Research Council.
"Fermilab's MINOS experiment is the newest and most powerful tool in
investigating the properties of the neutrino," said Secretary of Energy
Samuel W. Bodman. "This research may lead to new insights into the early
history and evolution of the universe. We eagerly look forward to the new
knowledge generated by the MINOS experiment."
The MINOS experiment will use a neutrino beam produced at Fermilab's Main
Injector accelerator to probe the secrets of these elusive subatomic
particles: where do they come from, what are their masses and how do they
change from one kind to another? In Minnesota, a 6,000-ton particle
detector will search for neutrinos that may have changed from one kind to
another during the 2.5-millisecond trip. Trillions of lab-created
neutrinos will pass through the MINOS detector each year. But because
neutrinos interact so rarely, only about 1,500 of them each year will
collide with atoms inside the detector. The rest pass right through with
no effect. MINOS scientists will use the change from one type of neutrino
to another as the key to discovering neutrinos' secrets.
"In time, the MINOS project will be viewed as a landmark event in the
history of physics. This world-class research is a bold, visionary
initiative which will have profound implications for our understanding of
the structure and evolution of the universe," said Congressman James L.
Oberstar, whose Minnesota district includes the Soudan site. "The
billion-year-old rock formations in the Soudan Underground mine, which is
located in my congressional district, have provided some of the world's
richest iron ore. Now the mine may help unlock mysteries about the origins
of the universe. I congratulate Dr. Earl Peterson, Director of the Soudan
Underground Laboratory; the University of Minnesota; Fermilab, and the
U.S. Department of Energy for being at the forefront of scientific
research and discovery."
Generating the neutrinos destined for Minnesota required building a
beamline housed underground at Fermilab. The beamline is a 4,000-foot
tunnel, whose direction, roughly north and slightly down, points from
Fermilab to Soudan. The beamline tunnel holds the components which
generate the neutrinos from protons accelerated by Fermilab's Main
Injector. Then comes the MINOS Hall, a 120-foot-long cavern located 350
feet below the surface of the lab campus, with access by an elevator
traveling the equivalent of a 30-story building. The MINOS Hall holds the
near detector, a smaller version of the MINOS detector at Soudan, which is
used to measure the properties of the neutrinos at the start of their trip
to northern Minnesota.
"Physicists from around the world are trying to understand what these
mysterious neutrinos are telling us," said Fermilab director Michael
Witherell. "Today, we are embarking on a journey of exploration using the
most powerful neutrino facility in the world. I am extremely proud of what
the people of Fermilab have accomplished in completing the NuMI project. I
would like to thank the American people and the federal government for
making the necessary commitment to support great science."
Prof. Ian Halliday, CEO of the UK's Particle Physics and Astronomy
Research Council, anticipates the revelations from the experiment's
precision measurements.
"The mysteries of the elusive neutrino are about to be unveiled," Halliday
said. "For the very first time we will be able to investigate the changing
state of this bizarre particle to an unprecedented accuracy of a few
percent in a controlled beam of neutrinos created in the laboratory. I'm
extremely proud that UK scientists have played a key role in bringing this
experiment to fruition and, in collaboration with their international
colleagues, will be amongst the first in the world to study its unique
characteristics."
The MINOS far detector is located in the Soudan Underground Mine State
Park, operated by the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources. As the
first iron mine in Minnesota, the Soudan mine is a registered national
historic site. Market forces brought operations to a close in 1962. Before
expansion to allow for the MINOS detector and the Fermilab Cryogenic Dark
Matter Search experiment, the Soudan underground laboratory was home to
the Soudan 2 detector experiment, searching for decays of protons, the
charged components of the atomic nucleus. Park staff now provide public
tours underground for 30,000 to 40,000 visitors annually, viewing both the
mine area and MINOS detector hall in the underground laboratory. An added
attraction is a 60-foot mural, painted on the wall of the cavern by
Minneapolis artist Joe Giannetti.
Michael Turner, the National Science Foundation's Assistant Director for
Mathematics and the Physical Sciences, believes the neutrinos'
infinitesimal mass belies their significant and ubiquitous impact.
"Neutrinos are always referred to as ghostly particles, as if they are of
little interest and have to be apologized for," Turner said. "Nothing
could be further from the truth. Neutrinos account for as much of the mass
of the universe as do stars, they play a crucial role in the production of
the chemical elements in the explosions of stars, and they may well
explain the origin of the neutrons, protons and electrons that are the
building blocks of all the atoms in the universe. MINOS will help us
better understand how neutrinos shaped the universe we live in."
Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, founded in 1967, is a Department of
Energy National Laboratory in Batavia, Illinois, about 40 miles west of
Chicago. Fermilab operates the world's highest-energy particle
accelerator, the Tevatron, on its 6,800-acre campus. About 2,500
physicists from universities and laboratories around the world do physics
experiments using Fermilab's accelerators to discover what the universe is
made of and how it works. Discoveries at Fermilab have resulted in
remarkable new insights into the nature of the world around us. Fermilab
is operated by Universities Research Association, Inc. a consortium of 90
research universities, for the United States Department of Energy, which
owns the laboratory.
For more information, please visit:
NuMI/MINOS Facts for Neighbors
http://www.fnal.gov/neutrinos
List of institutions collaborating on MINOS:
http://www-numi.fnal.gov/collab/institut.html
Brazil:
University of Campinas
University of Sao Paulo
France:
College de France
Greece:
University of Athens
Russia:
ITEP-Moscow
Lebedev Physical Institute
IHEP-Protvino
United Kingdom:
University of Cambridge
University College London, London
University of Oxford
Rutherford Appleton Laboratory
University of Sussex
United States:
Argonne National Laboratory
Benedictine University
Brookhaven National Laboratory
California Institute of Technology
Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory
Harvard University
Illinois Institute of Technology
Indiana University
Livermore National Laboratory
Macalester College, Minnesota
University of Minnesota, Minneapolis
University of Minnesota, Duluth
University of Pittsburgh
Soudan Underground Laboratory
University of South Carolina
Stanford University
Texas A&M University
University of Texas at Austin
Tufts University
Western Washington University
College Of William & Mary
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Press release by MINOS collaborators in the UK
http://www.pparc.ac.uk/Nw/minos_inauguration.asp
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