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A clear view
It is as translucent as
glass. It comes by train,
two railcars every week.
Fermilab will receive
250,000 gallons of it,
enough to fill a 25-meter
swimming pool.
What is it?
Some of the clearest mineral oil available in the country, intended for
the MiniBooNE experiment.
"It is crystal clear," said physics professor Randy Johnson, who has
overseen the selection process of the oil. "It's much clearer than
water that comes out of your faucet."
Johnson, who teaches at the University of Cincinnati, is one of 60
scientists working on MiniBooNE, an experiment designed to unravel
the mysterious properties of tiny ghost-like particles called neutrinos.
Until 1998, physicists believed that neutrinos are massless particles.
Since then a few experiments have shattered this dogma by
reporting results that indicate neutrinos do have a mass after all.
Understanding these surprising neutrino phenomena has become a
top priority for particle physicists around the world. The MiniBooNE
collaboration will study man-made neutrinos, created by Fermilab's
accelerators. A spherical steel tank, 12 meters (40 feet) in diameter
and equipped with 1,500 light sensors, represents the heart of the
MiniBooNE neutrino detector. When filled with oil, the detector will
record the interaction of neutrinos with oil molecules, a process that
leads to flashes of blue light. To observe the light pattern with
maximum intensity and minimum distortion, experimenters rely on
ultraclear oil.
"Oil companies have a very specific list of requirements for mineral
oil used for baby or cooking oil, for example," explained Johnson.
"Our requirements for clear oil exceed theirs."
For the MiniBooNE experiment to work well, scientists require the oil
to have an attenuation length of greater than 20 meters, which
means that at least 90 percent of the light sent into a
two-meter-thick sample of oil emerges at the opposite end.
To find the right vendor with the best oil for the experiment, Johnson
initiated a nation-wide bidding process in which oil distributors
submitted samples of their oil. Graduate student Jennifer Raaf and
postdoc Eric Hawker, both members of Johnson's research group,
determined the light transmission properties of each sample as a
function of length, using various shades of blue light.
"Ten different bids came in, each submitted with a ten-gallon
sample," said Raaf. "Many samples had an attenuation length of 15
meters. The worst was 2 meters. The oil that we chose has a
26-meter attenuation length."
Oil by the carload
In December the first two railcars
with 46,000 gallons of oil arrived at
Fermilab, paid for by a National
Science Foundation grant to Columbia
University. Fermilab's Jesse Guerra
and his group of technicians were
ready.
"We've been involved with the
MiniBooNE experiment from the start," said Guerra. "We've cleaned
the inside of the detector tank and helped with the installation of the
photomultiplier tubes. For the oil pumping station at the railhead,
we've done everything from engineering to producing blueprints to
fabrication."
This is the first time that Fermilab has received oil by rail. Setting up
the right infrastructure is only part of the challenge. Keeping the oil
clean is as much of a concern.
"We have to use food-grade clean pipes, railroad cars and trucks,"
explained Guerra. "The railcars need to be cleaned to our
specifications."
To minimize the amount of contaminants entering the oil inside the
detector tank, Andrew Bazarko, scientist at Princeton University,
carried out a series of tests by putting various detector materials,
such as rubber, epoxy and paint, into samples of oil and heating
them to 140 degrees Fahrenheit for eight hours. Finding the right
material for the 30 miles of electrical cable, which connect the light
sensors inside the oil-filled detector tank with the external data
acquisition system, was critical. The MiniBooNE scientists decided to
use Teflon-coated cables to keep the oil clear.
"We are concerned about two types of
contaminants," said Hawker, who together
with Raaf monitors the quality of the
shipped oil. "We watch for chemical
contaminants, such as water and plastic;
and particulates: little specks of dirt, dust
or paint, smaller than the thickness of a
human hair. They all reduce the attenuation
length. Even worse, they might scintillate,
creating sparks of light on their own."
So far technicians have pumped more than 40,000 gallons of oil into
the MiniBooNE detector.
"The highlight was before Christmas," said Guerra. "We started
pumping oil into the detector. It was a great Christmas gift for us."
It will take about six weeks to fill the detector tank. Scientists will
then begin to test their new detector using cosmic rays. In May the
first accelerator-made neutrinos will cross the detector.
"We are scheduled to operate for two years," said Johnson. "It
depends on what we find whether we will operate longer."
The MiniBooNE detector should soon make that perfectly clear.
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by Kurt Riesselmann
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