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The giant sphere that China hopes will track elusive neutrinos

The equipment is part of the Juno project which is expected to be up and running next year

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The Juno detector is in position at the Jiangmen Underground Neutrino Observatory in Jiangmen, Guangdong province. Photo: Xinhua
Dannie Pengin Beijing

China is a step closer in its quest to measure elusive particles called neutrinos with the installation of a massive subterranean sphere detector in the country’s south.

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The sphere is about 35 metres (115 feet) in diameter and is a central element of the US$376 million Jiangmen Underground Neutrino Observatory, or Juno, project in Jiangmen, Guangdong province.

It will be filled with 20,000 tonnes of a “liquid scintillator” and suspended in 35,000 tonnes of pure water 700 metres below ground to try to measure the mass of different types of neutrinos produced by two nearby nuclear power plants.

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Neutrinos are elementary particles that are very difficult to detect because they have no electrical charge, very little mass and move at near light speed.

Although almost all of the particles will pass through the detection liquid without a trace, some will interact with the liquid, triggering two flashes of light which will then be recorded by thousands of light-detecting phototubes.

State broadcaster CCTV reported on Friday that the sphere had been installed, and work was under way on assembly of its outer metal shell and the phototubes.

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All installation is expected to be completed by the end of November, and the facility will start collecting data from August next year, according to the report.

It was previously scheduled to start taking data in 2023.

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