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High-resolution photos are available at www.fnal.gov/pub/miniboone.
Questions about the LSND experiment should be directed to Jim Danneskiold,
Los Alamos public affairs office, 505/667-1640 or -7000, slinger@lanl.gov.
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – A University of Alabama professor is among
the collaborating scientists who have announced that a new detector
at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Fermi National Accelerator
Laboratory has observed its first neutrino events.
Dr. Ion Stancu, assistant professor of physics, is among the select
group of scientists who have partnered in the Booster Neutrino Experiment,
known as BooNE, in Batavia, Ill. The BooNE scientists have identified
neutrinos that created ring-shaped flashes of light inside a 250,000-gallon
detector filled with mineral oil.
Neutrinos, which mean “little neutral ones,” have considerable
influence on the universe, but little mass and no electric charge.
There are three types of neutrinos: the electron neutrino, muon
neutrino and tau neutrino. If neutrinos have mass, they can change
from one type into another -- from a muon neutrino into an electron
neutrino and back. This change is called neutrino oscillation. If
researchers are able to document such an oscillation, they will
prove, definitively, that neutrinos have mass.
The major goal of the MiniBooNE experiment, the first phase of
the BooNE project, is either to confirm or refute startling experimental
results reported by a group of scientists at the Los Alamos National
Laboratory. In 1996, the Liquid Scintillator Neutrino Detector (LSND)
collaboration stunned the particle physics community when it reported
a few incidences in which the antiparticle of a neutrino had presumably
transformed into a different type of antineutrino.
“Neutrinos could be very important,” said Stancu. “We
don’t see 90 percent of the matter in the universe. If there
is a mass to neutrinos, then the discovery could contribute to our
understanding of the universe’s fate. It is quite rewarding
research.”
Stancu and his research team have developed the software that will
analyze and identify each neutrino event in the detector. “This
software is the key in extracting any possible electron neutrino
event from the expected one million muon neutrino interactions in
the detector,” he said.
During the next two years, the BooNE collaboration will collect
and analyze approximately one million particle events to study the
quantum behavior of neutrinos. Although these ghost-like particles
are among the most abundant particles in the entire universe, little
is known about their role in nature.
“It is an exciting time for neutrino physics,” said
Raymond Orbach, director of the Department of Energy Office of Science.
“In the past few years experiments around the world have made
extraordinary neutrino observations, shattering the long-standing
view that neutrinos have no mass. The MiniBooNE experiment has the
potential for advancing the revolution of our understanding of the
building blocks of matter.”
The MiniBooNE experiment, under construction from October 1999
to May 2002, relies on an intense beam of muon neutrinos created
by the Booster accelerator at Fermilab. About 1,500 feet from its
production point, the neutrino beam traverses a 40-foot-diameter
tank filled with ultra clean mineral oil. The tank’s interior
is lined with 1,520 light-sensitive devices, called photomultiplier
tubes that record tiny flashes of light produced by neutrinos colliding
with carbon nuclei inside the oil.
“We will operate the experiment 24 hours a day, seven days
a week,” said Bill Louis, a Los Alamos scientists and co-spokesperson
of the BooNE collaboration “We will be looking for oscillations
of muon neutrinos into electron neutrinos. If nature behaves as
LSND suggests, our detector will collect about one thousand electron
neutrino events over the next two years. If not, we won’t
see any electron neutrinos. Either way, we’ll get a definite
answer.”
The BooNE collaboration comprises 66 scientists from 13 institutions
across the United States. The $19 million MiniBooNE experiment has
received funding both from DOE’s Office of Science and the
National Science Foundation.
“In addition to the importance of the science, MiniBooNE
is an example of a successful partnership among federal agencies,
universities and national laboratories,” said Marvin Goldberg
of the National Science Foundation. “The project has also
set new standards for education and public outreach in the field
of high-energy physics. The small scale of the project allows undergraduate
and graduate students to participate fully in all of the experimental
components.”
Fermilab is a U.S. Department of Energy national laboratory, operated
under contract by Universities Research Association Inc.
Stancu teaches and conducts research in the department
of physics and astronomy in the College
of Arts and Sciences at UA. The College of Arts and Sciences
is UA's largest division and the largest public liberal arts college
in the state, with approximately 5,000 undergraduate and 1,000 graduate
students. The College has received national recognition for academic
excellence, and A&S students have been selected for many of
the nation's top academic honors, including 15 Rhodes Scholarships,
13 Goldwater Scholarships, seven Truman Scholarships and 11 memberships
on USA Today's Academic All-American teams.
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