A further step in the design of the LAGUNA large neutrino observatory is launched

October 18, 2011

The kick-off meeting for the second phase of the LAGUNA’s design study starts today at CERN. The principal goal of LAGUNA (Large Apparatus for Grand Unification and Neutrino Astrophysics) is to assess the feasibility of a new pan-European research infrastructure able to host the next generation, very large volume, deep underground neutrino observatory. The scientific goals of such an observatory combine exciting neutrino astrophysics with research addressing several fundamental questions such as proton decay and the existence of a new source of matter-antimatter asymmetry in Nature, in order to explain why our Universe contains only matter and not equal amounts of matter and antimatter.

Underground neutrino detectors based on large, surface-instrumented, liquid volumes have achieved fundamental results in particle and astroparticle physics, and were able to simultaneously collect events from several different cosmic sources. Neutrinos interact only very weakly with matter so they can travel very large distances in space and traverse dense zones of the Universe, thus providing unique information on their sources and an extremely rich physics program.

In order to move forward, a next-generation very large multipurpose underground of a total mass of around 100 000 to 500 000 tons is needed. This new facility will provide new and unique scientific opportunities, very likely leading to fundamental discoveries and attracting interest from scientists worldwide.

This further step newly includes the study of long baseline neutrino beams from CERN accelerators. When coupled to such a neutrino beam, the neutrino observatory will measure with unprecedented sensitivity neutrino flavor oscillation phenomena and possibly unveil the existence of CP violation in the leptonic sector.

In addition, the observatory will detect neutrinos as messengers from further distant astrophysical objects as well as from the early universe. In particular, it will sense a large number of neutrinos emitted by exploding galactic and extragalactic type-II supernovae. The neutrino observatory will also allow precision studies of other astrophysical or terrestrial sources of neutrinos, such as solar and atmospheric ones, and will search for new sources of astrophysical neutrinos like, for example, the diffuse neutrino background from relic supernovae, or those produced in hypothetic dark matter particle annihilation in the centre of the Sun or the Earth. Furthermore, it will allow unprecedented search for the proton lifetime with sensitivities up to 1035 years, pursuing the only possible path to directly test physics at the grand unified theory scale.

Called LAGUNA-LBNO, this design study is funded by the European Commission under the Seventh Framework Programme and will last three years. LAGUNA is one of the Magnificent Seven , the large infrastructures included in the European Roadmap for astroparticle physics developed by the ASPERA* European network of funding agencies. There is currently an intense competition worldwide to host the next generation large neutrino observatory. Europe is currently leading deep underground science with a strong expertise in this area, thanks its four long running deep underground laboratories. LAGUNA will provide an important asset for Europeans to keep this leadership in deep underground physics.

LAGUNA-LBNO brings together 300 scientists, CERN and 38 other institutions from Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Japan, Italy, Poland, Romania, Russia, Spain, United-Kingdom and Switzerland. It is coordinated by André Rubbia from ETH Zurich.

More information: LAGUNA website: http://www.laguna-science.eu/

Provided by CERN

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vacuum-mechanics
Oct 18, 2011

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How much is it cost for this project?
CaliforniaDave
Oct 18, 2011

Rank: 5 / 5 (3)
Probably about the same as a couple of fighter jets or a few cruise missiles...
Cynical1
Oct 18, 2011

Rank: 1 / 5 (1)
Here's a thought - interesting or not. Suppose our universe is surrounded by a "shell" (for lack of a better word) of antimatter. Or even that our universe a bubble of matter in an even bigger universe of anti-matter. Matter and anti-matter are opposites. According to a well known and oft used axiom, "opposites attractive". This might be observation made in the matter universe, but in an anti-matter universe it might be, well, the opposite. SO, here we would be - matter running towards anti-matter - which would be running AWAY. This would happen at ever increasing accelerations.
Voila! I have solved the universal expansion mystery - without Dark Energy! Using only Occam's Razer as my guide....:-)
jsdarkdestruction
Oct 19, 2011

Rank: 5 / 5 (1)
*sighs* something is making the expansion of the universe expand at an increasing pace(or looks like it). We are not sure why/what is causing it so the effect has been termed dark energy. You are still trying to explain what causes the dark energy effect and Their are alot of better theories on what dark energy actually is than yours that fit occams razor better.
Cynical1
Oct 19, 2011

Rank: not rated yet
JS - One need only look at my login name to understand the nature of my post...:-)
rawa1
Oct 19, 2011

Rank: 1 / 5 (2)
IMO we understand the nature of neutrinos quite well already.

We may think about 3D water surface like about analogy of 4D spacetime. Along the phase interface a two kinds of solitons are always spreading: One kind of solitons result from coupling of surface waves with longitudinal waves of heavier phase and it always moves with subluminal speed (with respect to speed of surface ripples, which are serving like the anology of light waves here) and they correspond the photons. The other kind of solitons result from coupling of surface ripples with longitudinal waves of lightweight phase and they're always moving with superluminal speed and they correspond the neutrinos.
rawa1
Oct 19, 2011

Rank: 1 / 5 (2)
This simple dense aether model is slightly complicated with fact, the water surface is never completely flat, but it's deformed with Brownian noise, so that the photons move with subluminal speed only when their wavelength remains shorter, than the wavelength of CMBR noise (which serves as an analogy of Brownian noise in water surface model) - and the neutrinos are moving subluminally, when their energy remains lower, than the energy of CMBR noise photons (which are playing the role of both gravitational waves, both gravitons in this model). This explains, why majority of cold neutrinos (which are in thermal equilibrium with CMBR photons) evades the detection, because they're behaving like CMBR noise and they're nearly undistinguishable from short-wavelength photons.
Rank 5 /5 (1 vote)
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