Fermilab's Main Injector accelerator, one of
the most powerful particle accelerators in the world, has just achieved a
world record for high-energy beams for neutrino experiments.
Credit: Fermilab
A key element in a particle-accelerator-based
neutrino experiment is the power of the beam that gives birth to
neutrinos: The more particles you can pack into that beam, the better
your chance to see neutrinos interact in your detector. Today scientists
announced that Fermilab has set a world record for the most powerful
high-energy particle beam for neutrino experiments.
Scientists, engineers and technicians at the U.S. Department of
Energy's Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory have achieved for
high-energy neutrino experiments a world record: a sustained
521-kilowatt beam generated by the Main Injector particle accelerator.
More than 1,000 physicists from around the world will use this
high-intensity beam to more closely study neutrinos and fleeting
particles called muons, both fundamental building blocks of our
universe.
The record beam power surpasses that of the 400-plus-kilowatt beam
sent to neutrino experiments from particle accelerators at CERN.
Setting this world record is an initial step for the Fermilab
accelerator complex as it will gradually increase beam power over the
coming years. The next goal for the laboratory's two-mile-around Main
Injector accelerator -- the final and most powerful in Fermilab's
accelerator chain -- is to deliver 700-kilowatt beams to the
laboratory's various experiments. Ultimately, Fermilab plans to make
additional upgrades to its accelerator complex over the next decade,
achieving beam power in excess of 1,000 kilowatts, also referred to as 1
megawatt.
"We have the world's highest-power beam for neutrinos, and we're only
going up from here," said Ioanis Kourbanis, head of the Main Injector
Department at Fermilab.
Laboratory-made neutrino experiments start by accelerating a beam of
particles, typically protons, and then smashing them into a target to
create neutrinos. Scientists then use particle detectors to "catch" as
many of those neutrinos as possible and record their interactions.
Neutrinos rarely engage with matter: Only one out of every trillion
emerging from the proton beam will interact in an experiment's detector.
The more particles in that beam, the more opportunities researchers
will have to study these rare interactions.
The amped-up particle beam provided by the Main Injector enriches the
lab's neutrino supply, positioning Fermilab to become the primary
laboratory for accelerator-based neutrino research. Neutrinos are also
made in stars and in Earth's core, and they pass through everything --
people and planets alike.
"The idea is that if you build a more intense beam, neutrino
scientists from around the world will beat a path to your door," said
Fermilab Deputy Director Joe Lykken. "This is exactly what's happening."
Fermilab currently operates four neutrino experiments: MicroBooNE,
MINERvA, MINOS+ and the laboratory's largest-to-date neutrino
experiment, NOvA, which sends particles from Fermilab's suburban Chicago
location to a far detector 500 miles away in Ash River, Minnesota. The
laboratory is working with scientists from around the world on expanding
its short-baseline neutrino program and would also serve as host to the
proposed flagship Long-Baseline Neutrino Facility and Deep Underground
Neutrino Experiment, or DUNE. Scientists aim to address basic questions
about the mass and properties of each kind of neutrino as well as the
role neutrinos played in the evolution of the universe.
"Reaching this milestone is a fantastic achievement for Fermilab;
beam power is everything in our field," said DUNE co-spokesperson Mark
Thomson of the University of Cambridge. "The ability for Fermilab to
deliver, yet again, gives the international neutrino community huge
confidence in the future U.S.-hosted neutrino program."
Fermilab is also preparing to operate two experiments for studying
muons, short-lived particles that could reveal secrets about the
earliest moments of the universe. The increased beam power will also
benefit the Fermilab Test Beam Facility, one of the few facilities in
the world that provides muons, pions and other particles that
researchers can use to test their particle detectors.
Since 2011, Fermilab has made significant upgrades to its
accelerators and reconfigured the complex to provide the best possible
particle beams for neutrino and muon experiments. With the dedicated
work of the Fermilab Accelerator Division, the Main Injector is on track
to nearly double its Tevatron-era beam power by 2016.
"Fermilab's beamline has been a tremendous driver of neutrino science
for many years, and the continued improvements to the intensity mean
that it will remain a driver for many years to come," said Indiana
University's Mark Messier, co-spokesperson for the NOvA experiment.
Story Source:
The above post is reprinted from
materials provided by
Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (Fermilab).
Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.