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Prototyping is an indispensable step in the development of particle physics experiments like DUNE and projects like PIP-II. When complete, the Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment, or DUNE, will be the world’s most comprehensive neutrino experiment—and installing the giant far detector for DUNE in a cavern a mile underground will be like the world’s largest game of Operation. DUNE will consist of two detectors: a smaller near detector, to be located at the US Department of Energy’s Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory in Illinois; and a larger far detector, to be located at Sanford Underground Research Facility, or SURF, in South Dakota. The far detector is designed to be made up of four modules—two of which are under construction, and two of which are still being planned—each the dimensions of an almost-six-story building and as long as a football field. One module will be made up of 25 rows of smaller neutrino detectors called anode plane assemblies—APAs—some of...
a year ago

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