It will soon begin the difficult task of spotting neutrinos: tiny cosmic particles with a mind-bogglingly small mass.
The JUNO experiment, which will study the ways of the electrically neutral subatomic particles, will be the largest of its kind.
Nuclear fission is the most reliable source of antineutrinos, but they are difficult to characterize. A recent study suggests ...
What's New China is nearing completion of the Jiangmen Underground Neutrino Observatory (JUNO), a $300 million facility ...
China retired one neutrino detector and is now building its replacement. These detectors are huge, relatively inexpensive, ...
Observations of VFTS 243 provide evidence that black holes can form directly from the collapse of massive stars, without a ...
A massive £238 million detector is all set to uncover some mind-boggling mysteries of the universe. The detector in Kaiping, ...
JUNO will identify the heaviest neutrino type using advanced detectors Located 700m underground, JUNO features a 35m-wide acrylic sphere Antineutrinos from nearby nuclear plants will be key to JUNO's ...
A proposed funding program for small- and medium-scale projects reveals insights into the science, logistical challenges, and ...
Scientists have deployed new detectors for KM3NeT, a giant telescope that detects neutrinos from deep space. KM3NeT comprises ...
The KM3NeT telescopes, currently under construction, will catch high-energy neutrinos that could reveal secrets of the cosmos.