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Buried deep in a burrow and shielded by massive steel slabs, one of the newest gadgets at Long Island's Brookhaven National Laboratory is sighted in on the smallest and most mysterious components of the universe. In their massive spark chamber with its inch-thick aluminum plates, Brookhaven's atomic physicists hope to trap and study elusive particles that now are little more than factors in abstruse equations. With luck, they may even capture the elusive neutrino...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Tiny Secrets | 2/2/1962 | See Source »

Trapping a neutrino will be no mean trick. For the little particle is so small that it has no mass at all; it carries no electric charge and will be detectable only as a swiftly moving speck of energy. But the new Brookhaven spark chamber, designed by Drs. Leon Lederman, Melvin Schwartz and Jack Steinberger of Columbia University, has already proved to be remarkably sensitive. The spaces between its plates are filled with neon gas, and when alternate plates are charged with 10,000 volts of electricity, bright streams of sparks streak across the chamber at jagged angles. Those sparks...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Tiny Secrets | 2/2/1962 | See Source »

Just beyond the spark chamber, shielded by many feet of concrete and steel, curves the half-mile ring of Brookhaven's 30-bev (30 billion electron volts) synchrotron, world's largest atom smasher. If the physicists' calculations are correct, when the synchrotron goes into operation one of its products will be a vast number of neutrinos, snippets of energy powerful enough to penetrate the shielding and slip into the chamber, where they may be spotted by means of spark trails. Scientists expect to decipher the trails and learn some of the deepest secrets of the universe...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Tiny Secrets | 2/2/1962 | See Source »

Long before Brookhaven's scientists started to trap neutrinos, other scientists spun far-ranging theories about the little particles. Neutrinos may be small and shy, says Chinese-born Dr. Hong-Yee Chiu of Yale, but they are vastly important. At last week's Manhattan meeting of the American Physical Society, Physicist Chiu explained that neutrinos may well be the basic stuff of the universe...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: The Basic Stuff | 2/2/1962 | See Source »

Livingston has noted that the Cambridge accelerator, which attains higher speeds at lower energies, will be to the study of light-particle physics what the brookhaven machine is to heavy-particle physics...

Author: By Jonathan D. Trose, | Title: $11.5 Million Harvard-MIT Atom-Smasher Will Go Into Operation Here Next Month | 10/27/1961 | See Source »

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