ProtoDUNE’s argon filling underway
Monday 15 April 2024
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12 April, 2024, By Chetna Krishna, CERN
 ProtoDUNE begins liquid argon filling (Image: CERN)
This will be a significant step towards testing ProtoDUNE for the next era of neutrino research CERN’s Neutrino Platform houses a prototype of the Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment (DUNE)
known as ProtoDUNE, which is designed to test and validate the
technologies that will be applied to the construction of the DUNE
experiment in the United States. Recently, ProtoDUNE has entered a
pivotal stage: the filling of one of its two particle detectors with
liquid argon. Filling such a detector takes almost two months, as the
chamber is gigantic – almost the size of a three-storey building.
ProtoDUNE’s second detector will be filled in the autumn. ProtoDUNE
will use the proton beam from the Super Proton Synchrotron to test the
detecting of charged particles. This argon-filled detector will be
crucial to test the detector response for the next era of neutrino
research. Liquid argon is used in DUNE due to its inert nature, which
provides a clean environment for precise measurements. When a neutrino
interacts with argon, it produces charged particles that ionise the
atoms, allowing scientists to detect and study neutrino interactions.
Additionally, liquid argon's density and high scintillation light yield
enhance the detection of these interactions, making it an ideal medium
for neutrino experiments. Interestingly, the interior of the
partially filled detector now appears green instead of its usual golden
colour. This is because when the regular LED light is reflected inside
the metal cryostat, the light travels through the liquid argon and the
wavelength of the photons is shifted, producing a visible green effect. The DUNE
far detector, which will be roughly 20 times bigger than protoDUNE, is
being built in the United States. DUNE will send a beam of neutrinos
from Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (Fermilab)
near Chicago, Illinois, over a distance of more than 1300 kilometres
through the Earth to neutrino detectors located 1.5 km underground at
the Sanford Underground Research Facility (SURF) in Lead, South Dakota. Watch a short time-lapse video of protoDUNE being filled with liquid argon: https://youtu.be/FweOvhKsqaM
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