India Atomic
Energy Commission is currently developing the world's largest magnet, which weighs around 50,000 tons. Magnet is four times the size of the one used on the European Nuclear Agency's (CERN) Compact Muon Solenoid detector in Geneva, Switzerland.
Head of the Nuclear-Physics Division at India Atomic
Energy Commission, Vivek Datar, said the biggest magnet designed at the country’s Bhabha Atomic Research Centre in Trombay was made from the iron base. By comparison, the solenoid magnet used in CERN's feted Compact Muon Solenoid (CMS) is just 12,500 tonnes.
India will install this giant magnet on the Indian Neutrino Observatory (INO) installation, that built 4,300 feet (1,310 meters) below the cave in a mountain range located in the Bodi West Hills Reserved Forest in southern Tamil Nadu state. As the name suggests, the primary aim of the project is to find out more about the behaviour of the subatomic particles known as atmospheric neutrinos.
The Indian Neutrino Observatory is set to be built within this mountain in the Body West Hills Reserved Forest. (Picture from: http://www.popsci.com/) |
Neutrino particle research projects are nothing new – Super Kamiokande in Japan has been in operation for nearly 30 years, for example – but it is hoped the sheer scale of this one could lead to some interesting findings.
The Compact Muon Solenoid detector at CERN in Geneva. (Picture from: http://phys.org/) |
The observatory will begin construction in next 6-8 months and be completed in 2018. About 100 scientists and 26 research centers institutions and university taking part in the Indian government's ambitious project. *** [EKA | FROM VARIOUS SOURCES | TIMES OF INDIA | THE REGISTER | MAHARDIKA SATRIA HADI | KORAN TEMPO 4168]