What is the DUNE experiment?

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  • Опубліковано 6 січ 2019
  • Big discoveries need big detectors, and Fermilab’s Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment is one of the biggest. Fermilab plans to shoot beams of neutrinos and antimatter neutrinos through the Earth from Chicago to western South Dakota. The DUNE experiment will study neutrino interactions in great detail, with special attention on (a) comparing the behaviors of neutrinos vs. antineutrinos, (b) looking for proton decay, and (c) searching for the neutrinos emitted by supernovae. The experiment is being built and should start operations in the mid-to-late 2020s. In this video, Fermilab’s Dr. Don Lincoln gives us the lowdown on this fascinating project.
  • Наука та технологія

КОМЕНТАРІ • 390

  • @punypoppy9147
    @punypoppy9147 5 років тому +6

    Glad i found out Fermilab's channel and Dr Don months back. Easily the best vids out there. Keep 'em coming! :)

  • @VEVOJavier
    @VEVOJavier 5 років тому +3

    I am now studying psychology at university yet I have been watching your videos since I was in middle school. Thank you for everything Doc and Fermilab!

  • @paulmichaelson7203
    @paulmichaelson7203 5 років тому +5

    It's great to have you back again Dr. Don. I love your videos. I wish it didn't take so long to get DUNE up and running, but great science is worth waiting for.

  • @frankschneider6156
    @frankschneider6156 5 років тому +18

    Missing you mentioning the large worms crawling around the detector , that are sometimes being ridden by the vicious local natives.

  • @michealkelly9441
    @michealkelly9441 5 років тому

    Thanks for all you do, Dr. Lincoln and the makers of these vids

  • @blivion7203
    @blivion7203 5 років тому +41

    I'm Commander Shepard and this is my favorite Particle Physicist on the Citadel!

    • @anisotropictransgression9164
      @anisotropictransgression9164 5 років тому +1

      Shepard with Thu'um ... we're not worthy.

    • @blivion7203
      @blivion7203 5 років тому +2

      Glad to see there are some Mass Effect fans who are Physics nerds as well 🙃 (just like me).

    • @blivion7203
      @blivion7203 5 років тому

      @1Energine1 Hell yeah!

  • @SicilianDefence
    @SicilianDefence 5 років тому +2

    Thank you Don for these knowledge which you provide to us in the best possible fashion.
    Cheers,

  • @bruinflight1
    @bruinflight1 5 років тому +29

    Yaaaay!!! New Fermilab video!!! Thank you Doc! Happy 2019!

  • @chkhd
    @chkhd 5 років тому +2

    Happy 2019, hopefully many new videos to come, maybe even some findings!

  • @e.g.m6598
    @e.g.m6598 5 місяців тому

    Thank you for taking the time. Animations really helped too 😊

  • @AleksandrPodyachev
    @AleksandrPodyachev 5 років тому +78

    the neutrinos must flow!

    • @megavide0
      @megavide0 5 років тому

      :D ua-cam.com/video/jA-BRjujUF4/v-deo.html

    • @AleksandrPodyachev
      @AleksandrPodyachev 5 років тому

      @@megavide0 It was a reference to the book "Dune"

    • @MisterTutor2010
      @MisterTutor2010 5 років тому

      Shit, I just tokkd the same joke :(
      :)

  • @tresajessygeorge210
    @tresajessygeorge210 Місяць тому

    THANK YOU...
    PROF. DR. LINCOLN...!!!

  • @Dra741
    @Dra741 3 роки тому +1

    The penetration power of the neutrino is something that, I never anticipated that there was such a device

  • @Age_of_Apocalypse
    @Age_of_Apocalypse 5 років тому

    Great video: Fascinating! Thank You!

  • @hamentaschen
    @hamentaschen 5 років тому +14

    Dr. Don is so freaking cool!

    • @eval_is_evil
      @eval_is_evil 4 роки тому

      I know right ???? I bet he is savage when grading students though

  • @richardturietta9455
    @richardturietta9455 5 років тому

    Very informative, thanks!

  • @STohme
    @STohme 5 років тому

    Very interesting video. Many thanks.

  • @jamespurks1694
    @jamespurks1694 5 років тому

    Most interesting and informative.

  • @sysprog999
    @sysprog999 5 років тому

    Very Nice, Dr. Don.

  • @moriendus
    @moriendus 5 років тому

    This is amazing, thank you

  • @thomas.02
    @thomas.02 5 років тому +130

    The dune experiment is spicy

    • @shaihulud4515
      @shaihulud4515 5 років тому +1

      +Thomas Chow The spice must flow! I demand it!

    • @Bildgesmythe
      @Bildgesmythe 3 роки тому +1

      After reading the title, spice was the first thing that came to mind.

  • @jonvance69
    @jonvance69 5 років тому +4

    Great video, as always. How many oscillations is a nutrino expected to have in a distance of 800 miles though?

  • @FairyWeatherMan
    @FairyWeatherMan 5 років тому

    Wonderful video

  • @robfilmer
    @robfilmer 5 років тому

    Great video!

  • @fredinit
    @fredinit Рік тому

    Don, another excellent explanation - Reason #4 for D.U.N.E. - keeping Fermilab from becoming another DuPage housing development. Visited Fermilab on several occasions (in-laws live up IL-38 in Wheaton). Place is both a major science research facility - and a really cool art installation. I remember when Brookhaven's Muon g-2 storage ring was trucked in - made the news all across the area.

  • @A3Kr0n
    @A3Kr0n 5 років тому +3

    Rev up your engines for Dr. Don!

  • @Grandunifiedcelery
    @Grandunifiedcelery 4 роки тому +16

    DUNE could mean Deep Underground Nucleon-decay Experiment...

    • @Feelthefx
      @Feelthefx 3 роки тому +8

      DUNdE just doesn’t ring a bell.

    • @carloshamza7344
      @carloshamza7344 2 роки тому

      i realize I am kinda randomly asking but do anybody know a good website to watch newly released series online?

    • @jaxsamir3252
      @jaxsamir3252 2 роки тому +1

      @Carlos Hamza flixportal :P

    • @carloshamza7344
      @carloshamza7344 2 роки тому

      @Jax Samir Thanks, I signed up and it seems like they got a lot of movies there =) I really appreciate it!

    • @jaxsamir3252
      @jaxsamir3252 2 роки тому

      @Carlos Hamza Happy to help :)

  • @chlipecplusdoo6115
    @chlipecplusdoo6115 5 років тому +3

    I like this man.

  • @threadthathasnoend1212
    @threadthathasnoend1212 5 років тому +116

    I hope they oscillate without rhythm. Otherwise, they might attract a worm.

    • @onehitpick9758
      @onehitpick9758 5 років тому +4

      I hope these new neutrino observations are highly scrutinized and not travelling faster than light again. That was both horrifying and embarrassing.

    • @SpaghettiToaster
      @SpaghettiToaster 5 років тому

      You mean without

    • @SpaghettiToaster
      @SpaghettiToaster 5 років тому +3

      There's a black hole at fermilab, you can see it in the intro. He's making all these videos as he approaches the event horizon.

    • @alexandrebelinge8996
      @alexandrebelinge8996 5 років тому

      Nice !

    • @huntere5205
      @huntere5205 5 років тому

      But...if they oscillate without rhythm, we'll never learn! (Movement for Christopher Walken dance in ProtoDune)

  • @Dra741
    @Dra741 3 роки тому

    The timing aspect of it will give us a precise measurement of how much this isolation occurs between these particles and direction

  • @klausgartenstiel4586
    @klausgartenstiel4586 5 років тому

    again, it is the legend.

  • @ToxisLT
    @ToxisLT 5 років тому +2

    Dr. Lincoln, I'm here about that quantum gravity report that was due last September - any updates on that?:)

  • @Dra741
    @Dra741 3 роки тому

    And the discrepancy between the mass it fascinates me to this day even with my basic fundamental understanding

  • @WhoDoUthinkUr
    @WhoDoUthinkUr 3 роки тому +1

    I love Fermi lab

  • @Dra741
    @Dra741 3 роки тому

    The tie type which seems to be the most massive with an incredible surprise to me looking at the minimum of mass of the other Tai particles

  • @robertschlesinger1342
    @robertschlesinger1342 5 років тому +6

    Another great video, Don. Don Lincoln also did a 24 lecture video course on The Theory of Everything, offered by The Teaching Company. [I was not requested to cite this course.] The course is basic and suitable for a first year university non-physics major. My daughter watched the video course and now understands a lot more particle physics. Several decades ago, William Fowler (CalTech Nobel laureate) was visiting a class I was taking. He loved joking about the solar neutrino problem (now solved), and that perhaps the solution was that our sun had died (because the neutrinos pass through the sun more freely than the photons, to over-simplify the matter - no pun intended). So, the diminished solar neutrinos detected could mean the sun died and within the next couple hundred thousand years (possibly much sooner!), we'd experience this terrible fate. He loved joking, and this seemed amongst his favorite jokes.

    • @cloudpoint0
      @cloudpoint0 5 років тому

      The vacuum collapse of the universe is a much more serious and possibly imminent threat. We don’t know how to predict when it will happen and we can’t see it coming even when it gets underway. I suggest panic now while we have the chance.

    • @stardust4001
      @stardust4001 5 років тому

      Link to the documentary please...thnx

    • @robertschlesinger1342
      @robertschlesinger1342 5 років тому +1

      @@stardust4001 Hello "Star Dust",
      I presume you are referring to the Theory of Everything course that I cited in my comment. The 24 lecture course is commercially available through The Teaching Company. The course goes on sale periodically for considerable discount. Do not buy the course for full price unless you don't mind spending an extra couple hundred dollars. [I was not asked to cite this course.] You may alternatively watch the many FermiLab videos on UA-cam for free.

  • @AliHSyed
    @AliHSyed 5 років тому

    Woohoo new Fermi lab

  • @Dra741
    @Dra741 5 років тому

    I'm really buried in neutrinos and excited about this experiment because finding out about neutrino oscillations was very exciting to me and the excitement never ends if you never want to be bored study subatomic particle physics

  • @TheKlabim
    @TheKlabim 5 років тому +9

    Oh snap, it's Dr. Don 'The T-Shirt' Lincoln!

  • @ukbatole
    @ukbatole 5 років тому +8

    I wish you were my teacher at school Dr. Don.

    • @megavide0
      @megavide0 5 років тому +1

      You wish that Dr. Don were not Dr. Don but your teacher at school? ;P

  • @AutisticThinker
    @AutisticThinker 3 роки тому

    1:55 - I love how the sun is just beaming neutrons in that animation. :)

  • @realityisdigital
    @realityisdigital 5 років тому

    This looks interesting..

  • @viagra5207
    @viagra5207 Рік тому +1

    Is it currently possible to use neutrino beams to communicate through the whole earth to eliminate the delay of having to curve around the surface?

  • @josephpeters5681
    @josephpeters5681 5 років тому

    This guy is very smart. I learned a few stuff from him. Still am, thanks to UA-cam.

  • @nullanon5716
    @nullanon5716 5 років тому

    I actually know James Norris, he’s speaking in this next week on DUNE. He’s a good dude.

  • @robertrpenny
    @robertrpenny 4 роки тому

    Dr D, So it looks like neutrino rest mo is in the 10e-38 kg range or lower. SNO facility in 2002 or so found that neutrinos change types in transit implies positive m. 2015 Nobel for those 2 obs by SNO. Is the DUNE eqpt expected to get a good mo value? Also if mo differs for e, mu and t types which change at hi v, then is there not an E cons problem, since E^2=p^2*c^2+mo^2*c^4?

  • @chromebook1141
    @chromebook1141 3 роки тому +1

    The far detector current design is for four modules of instrumented liquid argon with a fiducial volume of 10 kilotons each. The first two modules are expected to be complete in 2024, with the beam operational in 2026. The final module is planned to be operational in 2027

  • @constpegasus
    @constpegasus 5 років тому

    How about a video on what a point particle is.

  • @clayz1
    @clayz1 5 років тому

    I liked this video. There, I liked it.

  • @michaelvangundy226
    @michaelvangundy226 5 років тому +2

    Is Dune being excavated or are the caverns already there? Natural or leftover from something else? How big, a mile deep?

  • @Dra741
    @Dra741 3 роки тому

    That's my question what is the frequency of the oscillation, in proportion to the direction of the beam?

  • @michelemoneywell5474
    @michelemoneywell5474 5 років тому

    Fermilab is in Batavia, Illinois, about 45 miles west of Chicago. Dune is a great sci-fi story-- read at least the 1st book if you have time and are so inclined. Great animation cat to jaguar to tiger! Anti-matter neutrinos-- sounds like fantasy (to me).

  • @Dra741
    @Dra741 3 роки тому

    I was really excited with the neutrino oscillations, however I was not able to determine the. Of distance and I think it was 135 that the oscillations were occurring but I think that the oscillations occur inversely proportional opposite, of the neutrinos the neutrinos

  • @robertrpenny
    @robertrpenny 3 роки тому

    Dr Don could you do a 10 min talk on CP symmetry violation? Or maybe 12 min if that's a hard assignment

  • @mikepennington8088
    @mikepennington8088 5 років тому

    What is the music that you use at the beginning and ending of the video ?

  • @Dra741
    @Dra741 3 роки тому

    I'm excited about our ability to generate neutrinos and direct them

    • @Dra741
      @Dra741 3 роки тому

      1987a supernova

  • @markgigiel2722
    @markgigiel2722 5 років тому

    How do you generate anti-neutrinos? Did I miss that part?

  • @frankharr9466
    @frankharr9466 5 років тому

    What an awesome experiment.
    Is anyone named Paul involved?

  • @iu6iu6
    @iu6iu6 5 років тому

    What is the music lol at the beginning and the end of the video?

  • @ZeroOskul
    @ZeroOskul 4 роки тому

    Kickin' that ass!

  • @lucifiaofthefreecouncil1312
    @lucifiaofthefreecouncil1312 4 роки тому +1

    WAIT! so does energy always spawn matter and anti matter together? or is it one or the other? can Matter neutrinos change into anti matter neutrinos like they change from Ve, Vu, Vt? do antimatter neutrinos have 3 types too? and do they also change between them? how do we create neutrinos in the lab! and how do we focus them into a particle beam? if they only respond to the weak nuclear force how can we confine them and direct their motion? SO MANY QUESTIONS!!!! [EDIT:yeah i just watched the video again and you answered my question on anti neutronos changing their type 3:08]

  • @MrZenerTech
    @MrZenerTech 5 років тому

    How do you make, store (contain), transport, & then launch anti-neutrinos from your device? What do you call your device that (launches/shoots/fires?) the neutrinos.

    • @petercarlson811
      @petercarlson811 5 років тому +3

      they aren't stored in any way. The are produced in a way that they leave the site of production in the desired direction.

  • @andraslibal
    @andraslibal 5 років тому +1

    1.5 billion USD for the DUNE experiment.
    Basic science is necessary but maybe let's build a functioning thorium reactor first. Because we really need it.

    • @acmefixer1
      @acmefixer1 5 років тому +1

      Why don't you take your whining to another more appropriate science forum. This is not the place for it.

  • @aparnas4679
    @aparnas4679 3 роки тому

    Is the dune experiment is still being built ? Please inform us , so that we could know what will happen

  • @projectw.a.a.p.f.t.a.d7762
    @projectw.a.a.p.f.t.a.d7762 3 роки тому

    Could the quantum entangled to the antimatter equal of each partical it becomes? In order to explain the amount of antmatter?

    • @rabokarabekian409
      @rabokarabekian409 2 роки тому

      antmatter is creeping particals in dirt holes (like black but braun)

  • @user-wb6ui4dl5l
    @user-wb6ui4dl5l 5 років тому +1

    I have a question about the four powers (electromagnetism, gravity, strong nuclear power, weak power
    How did these four powerful forces separate from each other after the creation of the universe?
    Is that weak nuclear force separated from that electromagnetic force?

    • @_John_Sean_Walker
      @_John_Sean_Walker 5 років тому +1

      When after the creation pressure and temperature drop, the fundamental forces seperate one by one. (In theory)

    • @petercarlson811
      @petercarlson811 5 років тому +1

      We have seen that with high energy the electromagnetic force and the weak nuclear force combine to what is called the electroweak force. And when the energy lowers the forces split again. It is therefore quite reasonable to draw the conclusion that this is what happened in nature too.

  • @Matt23488
    @Matt23488 4 роки тому +2

    It also casually disproves flat-earth due to angle of beam and depth of sensors.

  • @Gizziiusa
    @Gizziiusa 5 років тому

    does it have anything to do with the weirding way ?

  • @rayjasmantas9609
    @rayjasmantas9609 13 днів тому

    Is it possible to tell how far a activated energy, as a electric emission will travel without being on the opposite side?
    The difference between a dry cell electric reach to a phone wire's reach while holding about the same energy level, so on, for thinking improvement in the future studies.

  • @DanFrederiksen
    @DanFrederiksen 4 роки тому

    can proton and antiproton form a 'nucleus'? I'm guessing only insignificant amount of time.

  • @thomasdjonesn
    @thomasdjonesn Рік тому

    What if, there's more than one Big Bang? Like, instead of one inciting incident, there have been an infinite number in an infinite space? So, for example, part of what we're unable to detect, but clearly has an effect, is the result of things like proton decay from previous explosions?

  • @pb4520
    @pb4520 3 роки тому

    wow ! HOW did it all come to be? What a World.

  • @TheTwick
    @TheTwick 5 років тому +5

    I trust you’re going to make another video explaining the DUNE data, when it becomes available? ;-)

    • @fiftyfat
      @fiftyfat 5 років тому +2

      And when data will be available and analysed, you will hear about it from many sources !

  • @vitakyo982
    @vitakyo982 5 років тому

    Does Kamyokande measure anything coming from Fukushima ?

  • @bjarnivalur6330
    @bjarnivalur6330 5 років тому +18

    I'm curious, how do you make a neutrino beam?

    • @Khepramancer
      @Khepramancer 5 років тому

      @John Patriot eagle freedom boner
      Nice : p

    • @mikepennington8088
      @mikepennington8088 5 років тому +3

      Lavish it with praise

    • @kunjukunjunil1481
      @kunjukunjunil1481 5 років тому

      May be from radio active decay

    • @alektad
      @alektad 5 років тому +24

      You can't create a neutrino beam with a current technology, it's a poor choice of words. It's more like a cone, once the "beam" reaches the South Dakota is about 2 miles wide. And it is created by accelerating protons, slamming them into a barrier, directing what's created through a magnetic field and into another barrier with a slit. And then once again thought a magnet and into a barrier with no slits. Hope that helps.

    • @bjarnivalur6330
      @bjarnivalur6330 5 років тому +2

      @@alektad
      Yup. That helps. Thank you :D

  • @Dra741
    @Dra741 5 років тому

    After what we have seen even without the justification and running through the data we cleared it our senses had indicated something to us that moves totally outside the field the four basic forces

  • @sudonim2261
    @sudonim2261 3 роки тому

    My father was Geoffrey Mills.. RIP, dad.

  • @TheSilentWhales
    @TheSilentWhales 5 років тому +5

    Herbert's "Dune" references in comments in 3, 2, 1...

  • @susworld129
    @susworld129 Місяць тому

    Dune is magnets in every direction, haven't you seen the movie trailers?

  • @onepieceatatime
    @onepieceatatime 5 років тому

    How does DUNE compare to the NOvA far detector?

  • @GottfriedLeibnizYT
    @GottfriedLeibnizYT 5 років тому +1

    Duning Don

  • @TheElectra5000
    @TheElectra5000 4 роки тому

    Researchers: DUNE will be operational by mid 2020
    Coronavirus: Hold my saarlac

  • @johnmcnaught7453
    @johnmcnaught7453 5 років тому

    Nice overview. Hate to be the groundhog in his borough in the path of the beam heading to ND.

    • @cloudpoint0
      @cloudpoint0 5 років тому +1

      The Fermi neutrinos should harmlessly pass right through the groundhog, exactly the way the Sun's approximately 65 billion neutrinos pass through each square centimeter of you every second. They are called 'ghost particles' for a reason. The surprising thing is that they can even detect any of the sent neutrinos in ND.

    • @SpaghettiToaster
      @SpaghettiToaster 5 років тому

      If the beam interacted with a ground hog, it would've interacted with the miles of ground before and it would be useless. The reason they can build it underground is that the neutrinos don't interact with anything on their way.

  • @richd21t
    @richd21t 5 років тому

    These videos always bust my brain transmission.

    • @m_i_g_5108
      @m_i_g_5108 5 років тому +1

      This guy went to school for years and is still learning. Have fun catching up. 👍😁

  • @betaneptune
    @betaneptune 5 років тому

    How about a little more about how the neutrinos are being made and how many per second? And a little more about the mechanics of their detection?

    • @jfcf24
      @jfcf24 4 роки тому

      You can read the public TDR (Technical Design Report) of DUNE, search them in arXiv. You can also check LBNF

  • @geoffrygifari4179
    @geoffrygifari4179 5 років тому

    how can we be sure that neutrino reactions under the ocean/in the earth's core aren't detectable?

  • @RammsteinFan1100
    @RammsteinFan1100 4 роки тому

    Hello from Bosnia i would love to know how you detect neutrinos when they dont interact with matter? Also i would love to know how you plan to differ neutrinos from star from neutrinos you send from your lab?

    • @jfcf24
      @jfcf24 4 роки тому

      The key for the Detection of neutrinos is the structure of the underground Detector, that is actually a huge Time Projection Chamber TPC, filled with about 17K tons of liquid argon at -186 °C. Inside each TPC, DUNE will have 3 or 4,there are many Detection Systems, designed to detect specific particles or Photons. All the weakly signals will be digitized and transmitted to the surface. Neutrinos will interact because of the conditions of the LiAr, including a high electric field applied to the gas by a high voltage power supply, thousands Volts. We can distinguish between neutrino beams and external neutrinos, by using discrimination techniques and taking advantage of the Detectors calibration. This is not the ideal space to explain that deeply, I Just can say DUNE is a very complex and hard project, really a challenge and it is a privilege for me can be part of this collaboration and put my part in DUNE

    • @RammsteinFan1100
      @RammsteinFan1100 4 роки тому

      @@jfcf24 thank you for good and understandable reply i am just curious biologist willing to learn so answer fullfiled my curiosity :)

  • @user-pu8ch3ih1u
    @user-pu8ch3ih1u 5 років тому

    a key to dark matter or no time for energy exchange
    short version
    Energy exchange limit or limit for two point to interact.
    it is a bit hard to write down this thought for me.
    if two points have relative speed more then speed of light, they not able to interact.
    but they can interact through the third point. (exactly like dark matter)
    long version
    For a long time trying to communicate with physics to clarify my theory.
    with all and all main point here.
    -dark matter in our galaxy, (most likely particles emitted by central black hole)
    is particles that moving faster than light. (most likely you do not "belive" in this)
    if i assume it is correct, then big amount of hydrogen on edge of galaxy, is where this "dark matter particles" decay after losing speed. (decay like new particles from hadron collider)
    -parts of dark matter alredy found, but we do not about it. (perseption(particles from hadron collider))
    -particles found with hadron collider behave like a dark matter after loosing speed.
    -most likely there is a energy exchange speed limit in betwen two points (not sound speed),
    most likely it is a speed of light. (that about why we do not see dark matter, but see it interction with other(slower for it/faster for us) particles)
    -particles from hadron collider will be stable if placed in faster then light speed.
    whant to tell more, I hope this is enough to contact me.
    the key is a energy exchange speed limit
    (i want my Nobel for showing you dark matter)
    Best regards,
    Dynin A.I.

  • @zolavib1187
    @zolavib1187 2 роки тому

    How am I just finding this channel

  • @Dra741
    @Dra741 3 роки тому

    When I saw the fundamental formulas of the sun didn't match the neutrinos that were received in the detector my mind searched, but I didn't contemplate the oscillation but I knew something was happening, and I didn't have all the information at the time but the neutrino oscillation, confirms all formula with the son which had to be checked

  • @MisterTutor2010
    @MisterTutor2010 5 років тому

    The Neutrinos must flow :)

  • @sheilabitts6106
    @sheilabitts6106 3 роки тому

    Can you foresee making something like DUNE smaller and putting it on a space telescope to measure supernova?

  • @yxiv
    @yxiv 5 років тому +5

    I hope it will be different from Frank Herbert's Dune.

    • @shaihulud4515
      @shaihulud4515 5 років тому

      +velox guess, I was hoping the contrary...

  • @vz-v
    @vz-v 5 років тому +1

    "Buried in Neutrino data before you know it."
    He made a funny.

  • @spudhead169
    @spudhead169 5 років тому +1

    The last super nova we've seen in the milky way was 400 years ago. Surely we're due another one.

    • @spudhead169
      @spudhead169 5 років тому

      @ScienceNinjaDude Yeah I know, but I really want to see one before I croak. I can hope.

    • @maxmccormick3376
      @maxmccormick3376 5 років тому +1

      That's not how probability works

    • @spudhead169
      @spudhead169 5 років тому

      @@maxmccormick3376 Did you just comment that without reading the other replies? Sloppy man. I mean there were only two of them.

  • @TheGundeck
    @TheGundeck 5 років тому

    If neutrinos hardly interact with normal matter, I am very curious to know how we focus them into a beam.

    • @gulutaalan8845
      @gulutaalan8845 4 роки тому +1

      We don't focus neutrinos, we focus particles which decay into neutrinos, the rest is done by momentum conservation.

  • @lucifiaofthefreecouncil1312
    @lucifiaofthefreecouncil1312 4 роки тому

    What do you think creates the most expense in science, the experiments or the data analysis after?

    • @lordgarion514
      @lordgarion514 3 роки тому

      The LHC cost 4.75 billion to build, and has an annual budget of about 1 billion.
      Of that, just over 23 million is electricity, and computing time costs 286 million a year.

  • @justiceblue8209
    @justiceblue8209 5 років тому

    Say, I live in south Dakota this is not new news to me, haven't we been using Homestake mine for physics for quite a while now? Shooting neutrinos - sounds like the new Wild West!

  • @George.Andrews.
    @George.Andrews. 3 роки тому

    That's another fine mess you've got me into Stanley.

  • @john-or9cf
    @john-or9cf 5 років тому +9

    Obviously, it was 3,000,000 vs 3,000,042

    • @keanueraine
      @keanueraine 5 років тому +1

      Its explains Life, the Universe and yes......Everything!

    • @k_tell
      @k_tell 5 років тому +1

      Nope, if that was true the universe would have ceased to exist and been replaced by one infinitely more complicated.

    • @keanueraine
      @keanueraine 5 років тому

      @@k_tell hehehe You mean the one where the answer is "What do you get when you multiply six by nine?"

    • @k_tell
      @k_tell 5 років тому +1

      @@keanueraine entirely possible it has happened multiple times :)

    • @k_tell
      @k_tell 5 років тому

      @ I think you missed the fact that this thread is a tribute to the late great Douglas Adams. @john started the thread by saying 3,000,000 vs 3,000,042, which was a reference to the fact that, in the Hitch Hiker radio series, "42" is the answer to the "ultimate question of Life, the Universe, and Everything"".
      However, in the radio series the problem is that no one knows what the question is.
      Later it is said that some people believe that if the question and the answer are ever known at the same time then the universe would cease to exist and be replaced by something infinitely more complicated, and further that other people believe that this has already happened.
      If @john and @train Jackson were correct then both the question and the answer would be known in the same universe. If the hypothesis above was correct then the universe would cease to exist.
      Hence my comments. They had more to do with literature than Physics, sorry!