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Earth Space Science

New Neutrino Detector Being Built In Minnesota 61

lithis writes "NOvA, a new neutrino detector, is being built in northern Minnesota. MPR has information on the project's funding and the International Falls Daily Journal talks about the environmental issues. This detector will complement the MINOS neutrino detector in the Soudan Underground Laboratory."
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New Neutrino Detector Being Built In Minnesota

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  • Minneosta (Score:5, Funny)

    by Frankie70 ( 803801 ) on Sunday May 03, 2009 @05:16AM (#27804625)

    Where in the hell is "Minneosta"?

  • Finally! (Score:3, Funny)

    by Shag ( 3737 ) on Sunday May 03, 2009 @06:05AM (#27804789) Journal

    It's about time someone found a use for northern Minnesota. :)

    (Shout-outs to my friends at the call-center in Chisholm)

    • You mean, other than logging, mink farming, and fly breeding.
      • by osu-neko ( 2604 )
        And camping. I highly recommend the Boundary Waters Canoe Area. I've been to the Black Hills, the Rockies, both oceans and the Gulf, all over this US of A, and they all have their beauty and charms, but the BWCA on the Minnesota-Ontario border is the most beautiful place I know. Just make sure to bring the mosquito repellent. ;)
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday May 03, 2009 @06:53AM (#27804947)

    ...detecting neutrinos.

    Nothing else ever happens around here.

  • by juan large moose ( 27329 ) on Sunday May 03, 2009 @07:46AM (#27805113) Homepage

    I've been to the Soudan mine and the underground lab. Heck, I helped get them wired up. The network at the site is all fibre-optic and, except for the VAXen they still had running a few of years back, it is (or was) all very state-of-the art. The uplink, however, is a different story.

    Perhaps this new project, which they've actually been working on for years, will give them the boost they need to get a fiber run from Ely. Maybe they've gotten it already. When I was working with the project, we had to run fiber to a hut on a hill, run coax to the other company's hut, microwave the signal to Tower, MN, and then run it over 11 pair of copper to Soudan.

    It worked.

    If you like the outdoors and like to travel, it's beautiful country up there. If you don't mind the skeeters and the black flies. The Soudan Mine is actually a state park, and during the summer months you can visit. They run tours down the mine on a regular basis. You ride a car down an incline into the mine, about a half mile down and they walk you around and show you how the mining was done. Greenstone and iron... the iron so pure you can weld to it.

    If you catch the 10 am tour (double check me on that before you go) you also get a tour of the Physics lab. It puts the BatCave to shame--and yes, there are plenty of bats down there. The lab is carved out of the rock and iron of the mine and it looks like a set from a War Games or Dr. Strangelove type movie. Huge (very) steel plates hang from railings overhead, with fine fiber optic cable running through them, trying to catch a glimpse of a neutrino or two as they fly through. The neutrinos, of course, are being fired at Soudan from Fermilab in Illinois.

    Worth the trip, just to see the mine, but the Physics lab is icing on the underground cake.

    http://www.dnr.state.mn.us/state_parks/soudan_underground_mine/index.html [state.mn.us]

    • Mmmm... underground cake...

      Thank you for the details though. Sounds really interesting. Unfortunately I'm very far away from Minnesota, or even the USA.

  • No Nova! No disassemble!
  • Really. How dense can you be?

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