China’s Deep-Sea Hailing Detector Dives for Ghost Particles
China’s Hailing deep-sea detector dives 3,500m underwater to capture ghostly neutrinos, offering fresh insights into exploding stars, black holes and the universe’s birth.
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China’s Hailing deep-sea detector dives 3,500m underwater to capture ghostly neutrinos, offering fresh insights into exploding stars, black holes and the universe’s birth.
JUNO, the world’s largest neutrino observatory 700m underground in Guangdong on the Chinese mainland, began operations Aug 26, uniting 700 scientists to probe cosmic neutrinos.
China’s JUNO neutrino detector reaches its final construction stage, aiming to unlock new insights into neutrinos and the universe. Expected completion: August 2025.
After over nine years of construction, China’s Jiangmen Underground Neutrino Observatory (JUNO) has completed its main body and is set to become operational next year, aiming to unlock the mysteries of the universe.
JUNO has entered its final construction phase, aiming to determine the neutrino mass hierarchy and become a key international center for neutrino research by the end of November.