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Big Infrastructure for Big Science - The Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment

Big Infrastructure for Big Science - The Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment

Update: 2024-08-01
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Scientific research needs supporting infrastructure – some small, some big, but rarely simple. The Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment – DUNE – will study the neutrino, one of the smallest atomic particles that is a fundamental building block of the universe. DUNE will send neutrinos generated at the Long Baseline Neutrino Facility near Chicago 800 miles though the earth to a massive detector in South Dakota, 1500 meters underground, that will collect data for scientists around the world.



To explain the experiment itself, the infrastructure that will make it possible, and how that infrastructure is being built, we’re talking with Ron Ray, Particle Physicist at Fermilab and Deputy Project Director of the LBNF/DUNE project team, to join us. Ron earned his Ph.D. in particle physics from the University of California-Irvine and worked as a scientific researcher at Northwestern University.

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Big Infrastructure for Big Science - The Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment

Big Infrastructure for Big Science - The Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment

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