Sunday, March 1, 2026

Neutrino Research

Brookhaven: (Satellite)
Fermilab: (Satellite)
Argonne: (Satellite)

The following post has motivated me to record some thoughts concerning neutrino research.
Michel Talbot posted
The Cowan–Reines Neutrino Experiment. Physicists Clyde L. Cowan and Frederick Reines confirmed the existence of neutrinos experimentally in 1956. In one of the largest physics experiments of its time, they detected the neutrino, a particle postulated by Wolfgang Pauli in 1930 to explain how beta decay could conserve energy, momentum, and spin. They conducted experiments to detect it using inverse beta decay, in which an electron antineutrino interacts with a proton inside an atomic nucleus producing a neutron and a positron. The idea was to detect a neutrino by looking for the particles it left behind after it interacted with something. They set up their experiment using a tank of water and layers of liquid scintillators that could pick up signals from the secondary particles; a nuclear reactor provided the neutrinos. When a neutrino interacted with a proton in the water tank, the resulting particles would leave signature tracks in the liquid scintillator, revealing the neutrino’s presence. They first performed the experiment at the Hanford Site in Washington, but the cosmic-ray background muddied their data too much. So they moved to the Savannah River Plant in South Carolina where they had better shielding against cosmic rays—and that’s where they got their definitive results. They were able to identify about three neutrinos per hour in the many months of data they had collected. The results, which were consistent with Fermi's predictions, were published in Science in July 1956. Frederick Reines was awarded the 1995 Nobel Prize in Physics for this experiment.
Bill Lah: 2nd far detector Nova   https://novaexperiment.fnal.gov/

Michel Talbot commented on his post
Those odometer-like things sticking out of the panels are event counters attached to 90 delayed peak detectors each connected to a photomultiplier tube (30 are visible in this photo). This is where the experimental neutrino counts came from. The oscilloscope is only for diagnosing the detection pulse waveforms when calibrating the timing circuits for the experiment, also for impressing the boss because oscilloscope traces are sexier than clicking mechanical counters that increment about once a day on average.

Michel Talbot commented on his post
Flash forwards 14 years to November 13, 1970 and Argonne National Laboratory detects the first 'Neutrino Event' in a hydrogen bubble chamber. Here a neutrino hits a proton in a hydrogen atom; the collision occurs at the point where three tracks emanate on the right of the photograph.

Michel Talbot commented on his post
A side view of the 300-litre Hanford Liquid Scintillation Neutrino Detector surrounded by 90 photomultiplier tubes, each with a 5 cm diameter face that had a thin, photosensitive surface. The liquid scintillator converts a fraction of the energy of the positron into a tiny flash of light that travels through the highly transparent liquid to the Photomultiplier tubes (PMT) where individual photons trigger a cascade of secondary electrons that generate an electronic pulse strong enough to be detected on an oscilloscope screen.

g-2 Experiments


I've seen photos of a transport of a big magnet from the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal to Fermilab, but I can't find any notes on that move. It was the final leg of transferring the magnet from the Brookhaven National Lab to the Fermilab. Brookhaven used it for their Muon g-2 experiment. They found a discrepancy between what was predicted by the Standard Model and their experimental result concerning the magnetic moment of the Muon neutrino. Because the results are statistical, the more neutrinos they measure, the more confidence they have in the result. Since Fermilab can produce a beam with more neutrinos [7:36 video They can currently produce trillions of neutrinos every second.] in it than can Brookhaven, they moved the magnet to Fermilab. During that move, they also upgraded the instrumentation.

fnal_Aug_10_2023
The ring is 50' in diameter. 
The Brookhaven experiment shut down in 2001. The ring was moved in 2013. Fermilab ran the experiment for six years and shut off the muon beam on July 9, 2023. They now have a data set 21 times the size of the Brookhaven's data set. They plan to spend two more years to analyze the last three-years' worth of data. In the meantime, theorists are trying to figure out how to compute a value from the Standard Model with comparable precision. Since a 2020 computation, they invented a second way to compute the value. But it disagrees with the 2020 calculation!

Facebook Reel

anl
"Simon Corrodi installing a calibration probe at Argonne’s solenoid magnet test facility. (Image by Mark Lopez/Argonne National Laboratory.)"
Argonne National Laboratory is part of the collaboration that "consists of 181 scientists from seven countries and 33 institutions."
This magnet at Argonne is used to calibrate the probes that are used to measure the field in the main magnet at Fermilab. "The facility enabled the scientists to achieve field measurements down to just a few parts per billion — like measuring the volume of water in a swimming pool down to the drop."

Generating neutrinos allows Fermilab to reuse all of their particle accelerator equipment except for the main ring. And the Muon g-2 is just one of several neutrino experiments that they have run, are running or plan to run.
@ 3:22

A "fun fact" from the video is that the horn that is used to focus the particles coming from the photon target uses 200,000 amps. I wonder what the power supply looks like for that gizmo.
@ 7:10

Building super-conducting magnets is an area of expertise at the BNL. [bnl_magnets] That explains why the first g-2 experiment was run there. When it appeared that they may be discovering new science, it was moved to Fermilab to more efficiently get better results because Fermilab can generate more neutrinos. 

A Little Theory


I can remember that for decades after they were discovered, they thought the mass of a neutrino was zero. And detectors were finding only a third of the expected number of neutrinos coming from the sun. There are three flavors of neutrinos: electron, muon and tau. When they determined that a neutrino changes it flavor, called oscillation, that indicated neutrinos have mass. And that explained why only a third of the expected number of neutrinos were arriving from the sun. But the mass is very small and is still unknown.

IceCube


icecube
After six years of boring 86 holes in the Antarctic ice, IceCube was completed in Dec 2010. It was built to help search for the source of cosmic rays. The DeepCore subdetector was added to help study neutrino oscillations. 100gb is sent each day by satellite to a data store in at UW-Madison.

nsf
"The server room at the IceCube Neutrino Observatory. Photo Credit: Benjamin Eberhardt; ICECUBE/National Science Foundation"
It has been successful in its expected role in astronomy. In 2016, it helped determine that the source of a burst of neutrinos was from a blaser. A blasar is a quasar whose jet points at earth. This could be a source of cosmic rays. Cosmic rays themselves can't be used to determine a source because they are charged particles and their paths are distorted by interfering magnetic fields. Since neutrinos rarely interact with anything, they travel in straight lines.
IceCube has also made a couple of unexpected discoveries in fundamental physics.

In June 2023, an image of the Milky Way made with neutrinos instead of photons was released.
astronomy
"Each strip here shows the Milky Way using different techniques. At top is an optical image, showing clearly the dust and gas in the galactic plane. Below that are gamma-ray observations from the Fermi-LAT 12-year survey; the next two strips show the neutrinos astronomers expected to receive, based on the presence of gamma rays. At bottom is observed neutrino sources using the new technique. Credit: IceCube Collaboration"

icecube-gen2
A second-generation detector is being planned that will expand the volume from 1 cubic km to 8 cubic km using new, more sophisticated light sensors.


DUNE (Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment) and PIP-II

Fermilab has been shooting neutrinos 800 miles through the earth to a former underground mine, Sanford Underground Research Facility, in South Dakota for years. (I'm trying to remember if these include the experiments that discovered flavors and oscillation.) They are now working on a major upgrade of the detector, DUNE, and building a new accelerator, PIP-II.

fnal_detectors
DUNE consists of two detectors, the near detector is on the Fermilab campus, and the far detector is in the mine. The far detector is huge and will be used for neutrino astronomy as well as particle physics experiments. The reason the far detector is deep underground is to shield it from cosmic rays and other surface noise.

Chicago Tribune, Sep 14, 2023, p1


Feb 2026: I've been seeing videos that DUNE is way over budget and behind on their schedule. Also, experiments being built in other countries might get results earlier and make DUNE obsolete before it is finished.

1913-2006 Pinhook Bridge over Big Walnut Creek near Greencastle, IN

(Archived Bridge Hunter; Bridge Hunter; Historic Bridges; B&T; Satellite)

Pinhook Pottery keeps access to the south end of the bridge open.

Sherman Cahal posted four photos with the comment:
It was a cold, wintry day when I made a day trip through Putnam and Owen counties in #Indiana to photograph historic structures and capture the subdued seasonal mood. The Pinhook Bridge was one of the stops along the route.
The Pratt through truss once carried County Route 125 North over Big Walnut Creek and was built as part of township road improvement efforts initiated by local residents in 1911. Fabricated by the Vincennes Bridge Company and completed in 1913, the bridge remained in service until its closure to traffic in 2006. Although there are no plans for removal due to cost, the structure now stands #abandoned.
1

2

3

4

It is hard to see the pins, but I saw at least one. So, this is a pin-connected bridge.
B&T

This view helps confirm that it is a pin-connected truss.
B&T

"It and the Houck steel bridge, even though erected by different contractors, were obviously products of the same fabricator. They have identical dimensions and overall appearance is the same. Another nearby span that was replaced called the Wildwood Bridge, was the same as well. The county likely bought them all at the same time." [Anthony Dillon comment on ArchivedBridgeHunter]

Saturday, February 28, 2026

1916,1930,1979 Rairden Bridges over Bighorn River south of Manderson, WY

1916: (Archived Bridge Hunter; Bridge Hunter; no Historic Bridges; Satellite)
1930,1979: (Archived Bridge Hunter is broke; Bridge Hunter; no Historic Bridges; Satellite)

While tracing US-20+US-14 east from Yellowstone National Park until they separated, I notice the Google Maps label of "Old Rairden Bridge."
The Old Rairden Bridge is a pin-connected through truss span of 250' (76m). [BridgeHunter]
The replacement bridge is no spring chick.
Street View, Oct 2024

Street View, Oct 2024

Street View, Oct 2024

It looks like the "new" bridge has a steel-girder approach span.
Street View, Oct 2024

Photo by John Bernhisel via BridgeHunter_1916

1962 PA-59 Cornplanter Bridge over Allegheny Reservoir (Kinzua Dam) near Warren, PA

(Archived Bridge Hunter; Bridge Hunter; no Historic Bridges; Satellite)

"Longest bridge in Warren County. Named after Cornplanter, a Seneca war chief and diplomat. Later renamed in 1978 for James Morrison, the first permanent settler in Kinzua Township, though the Cornplanter name is still commonly used." [ArchivedBridgeHunter]

I always like photos of bridges built to span a reservoir before the reservoir is filled.
Jackson-Township historical preservation posted
Bridge over the Kinzua Dam (Allegheny Reservoir), located on Route 59 just east of the city of Warren, PA in the 1960s.  The Allegheny Reservoir on the Allegheny River is a flood control project but also provides many forms of outdoor recreation in the surrounding areas.

Scott T, May 2019

This 1813' (554m) long bridge has spans of 300' (91m). [BridgeHunter]

Friday, February 27, 2026

I&M Canal: Lock: #11at Ottawa, IL

(Satellite)


We can see the notch for the gate on the right and the hinge hardware in the foreground. I'm glad someone is keeping the vegetation under control on the trail side.
Trail View, Jul 2023

A view of the other (west) end.
Trail View, Jul 2023

Judging from the lighter stone work, they have done some major repairs.
Trail View, Jul 2023

He managed to keep his face in the frame during the entire video. He taught me that the lighter stone is repair work was done in the 1980s when the canal became the first National Heritage Corridor.
Facebook Reel

Trail access is just a little over 1000' feet away.
Satellite

Thursday, February 26, 2026

New Orleans, LA, $615m Permanent Canal Closures and Pumps

17th Street Canal: (Satellite)
Orleans Canal: (Satellite)
London Avenue Canal: (Satellite)

The USACE has built a levee between Lake Pontchartrain and New Orleans to protect New Orleans from a storm surge in the lake when a hurricane passes through the area. These storm surges can be so severe in the lake that they are now building levees to protect towns on the west shore of the lake. The levee system around New Orleans has openings that allow drainage canals to empty into the lake during normal times. But when a surge is coming, they have to close the gates on those openings to keep the lake out of the city. But the same hurricane is going to dump a lot of rain in the city. So, when the gates are closed, pumps lift the rainwater from the city up into the lake.

Facebook Reel
Filling the Superdome in 90 minutes is equivalent to filling an Olympic-sized swimming pool in 3.6 seconds.
https://www.floodauthority.org/

There are three canals with gates and pump houses (#8 in this figure). I presume the flow rate in the above video is for all three pump houses combined.
https://www.floodauthority.org/

17th Street Canal


FloodAuthority_pccp

I included the flood wall on the right so that we can see how tall it is. The gates are on the left. I'm guessing the pumps are in the center and diesel-generator sets are on the right because they probably lose power during a hurricane. All of those tanks in the foreground clued me in about the diesel generators. I presume they store diesel fuel.
Street View, Feb 2023

This view confirms that they use sluice gates.
Street View, Oct 2025

Orleans Canal


FloodAuthority_pccp

The Orleans Pump Station is a lot smaller. That makes sense because this canal drains a smaller area between the other two canals. 
Street View, Apr 2024

This is what the lake side looks like.
Street View, Apr 2025

London Canal


FloodAuthority_pccp

Street View, Mar 2024

UP Bridge over Salt Creek in Lincoln, NE. collapsed because of a fire

(Archived Bridge Hunter; Bridge Hunter; no Historic Bridges; Satellite)

2:24 video @ 0:50
Railroad bridge collapses after fire
The bridge collapsed after burning for just a couple of hours.
The line saw about one train a week.

John Cockle posted two photos with the comment:
Big time bummer: a fire has destroyed the western trestle approach to a UPRR bridge spanning Salt Creek in the heart of Lincoln, NE.  The damage to the trestle section was severe enough to cause one end of the truss bridge to collapse into the creek.  This bridge was actively use by UPRR and they will have to negotiate with BNSF for an alternative.  
I believe this is/was a lattice-type truss bridge. Can anyone confirm that understanding? Second photo is by Gary Binder from the Nebraska Railroads FB page.
Dennis DeBruler: This is Nathan Holth's comment on Bridge Hunter: "it's not a Whipple... it's an extremely rare variation of the lattice truss, the Triple Intersection Warren. Most lattice trusses are Quadruple Intersection Warrens (sometimes called quadrangular). A very nice and highly significant historic bridge." https://web.archive.org/web/20210620010517/https://bridgehunter.com/ne/lancaster/up-salt-creek/
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2

"Built 1899, Moved here 1921" The bridge is 230' (70m) long, and the span is 100' (30m). [BridgeHunter]

Trail View, Feb 2023

It looks like Salt Creek has levees.
2015 photo by John Marvig via BridgeHunter


When I think of Lincoln, NE, I think of CB&Q. And, indeed, it had six spokes into this town. UP and RI had routes through this town, and C&NW and MoPac had routes that terminated in this town. Today, only the CB&Q and UP routes are still used. I see that US-6 and US-34 also go through this town. The "bridge to nowhere" that is north of the UP bridge used to connect to MoPac.
1964/66 Lincoln Quad @ 24,000

This is a view of the UP bridge from the abandoned MoPac connection.
Milton McNeeLee, May 2017