Sudbury Neutrino Observatory

A neutrino detector built into the largest man-made underground cavity in the world

Category Strange Science, Instruments of Science, Subterranean Sites

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More than a mile underground in an Ontario mine is the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory. The detector is located in the largest man made underground cavity in the world: a barrel 108 feet deep and 72 feet across forming a chamber roughly the size of a 10 story building. The entire chamber is filled with water, and its sole purpose is to detect solar neutrinos.

The walls of the chamber are lined with plastic to help to keep down the radiation levels from uranium and thorium in the surrounding rock. Inside the chamber is an enormous Buckminster Fuller sphere with 9600 photomultiplier tubes which itself sits inside a forty foot acrylic sphere filled with 1,000 tons of heavy water. (The $330 million dollars worth of heavy water is on loan from Atomic Energy of Canada Limited.) SNO, as it's known, is situated in the deepest part of the iron mine, helping to shield the detector from cosmic rays.

Despite the fact that billions of neutrinos stream through one's body every second, they can only be detected when they strike an atom's nucleus, giving off light. They are notoriously difficult to detect. Roughly 8 to 10 neutrino strikes are detected a day and a single stray photon can cause a false event.

Having finished the recording element of the experiment, the heavy water has been drained out as the detector is being upgraded for the SNO+ experiment. The acrylic sphere will be filled with an organic liquid much like mineral oil which can detect neutrinos of a much lower energy than the SNO could.

While the observatory itself is not currently open to the public for tours, in nearby Greater Sudbury the museum Science North shows "Secrets from the Sun," a video tour of the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory.

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  • & Anonymous June 28, 2009
    Regarding the size of the open space this device is built in, I find it hard to believe that it is the largest underground opening ever. I'm a rockhound, as such I study mining operations. There are mountains all over the world which are collapsing as the stopes (stopes are openings made by the removal of ore) in them slowly collapse. Giant silver mines in South America were mined for hundreds of years, and now the mountains they were in are collapsing as the wooden supports decay. Ore bodies are removed in toto, with huge wooden cribbing towers built to lift miners to the top of the stope to continue removing gold/copper/silver/lead etc ore. The larger the ore body, the larger the stope(s). There are sites in Colorado and Arizona (US) Bolivia, Mexico, just for example, where subsidence into huge underground chambers is taking place. That said, this device is amazing! Questioning the "largest" size of the relatively small chamber it is housed in isn't intended to diminish the amazing nature of the scientific device being discussed.
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