Beneath a granite hill in southern China, a massive detector is nearly complete that will sniff out the mysterious ghost particles lurking around us.
It will soon begin the difficult task of spotting neutrinos: tiny cosmic particles with a mind-bogglingly small mass.
The $300 million JUNO facility has taken over nine years to construct and is equipped with advanced technology designed to ...
JUNO’s liquid scintillator detector is housed within a 35.4-meter acrylic sphere, submerged in a larger, 44-meter-deep pool ...
The Jiangmen Underground Neutrino Observatory, known as JUNO for short, is located in Jiangmen, Guangdong province, and is ...
Located more than 2,000 feet below the ground, China is close to completing its state-of-the-art neutrino detector.
The Jiangmen Underground Neutrino Observatory (JUNO) is almost ready to start recording data about neutrinos floating around ...
The core part of the Jiangmen Underground Neutrino Observatory. [Photo provided to China Daily] The final stage of the construction of Jiangmen Underground Neutrino Observatory (JUNO) began on ...
Compared to similar neutrino experiments using liquid scintillator, JUNO's detector is 20 times larger in volume, has three ...
Staff members seal the bottom of a water tank with Tyvek material at the construction site of the Jiangmen Underground Neutrino Observatory (JUNO) in Jiangmen, south China's Guangdong Province ...