Tuesday, February 25, 2025

"Uncover hidden mine shafts and more" With Your Own $100 Muon Detector

From IEEE Spectrum, February 24:

https://spectrum.ieee.org/media-library/inside-a-mine-tunnel-a-tripod-supports-a-rectangular-enclosure-a-cutaway-diagram-shows-two-sensor-boards-separated-by-layer-of.png?id=56565917&width=2400&height=2261

In the mid-1960s, the Nobel Prize–winning physicist Luis Alvarez had a wild idea. He proposed using muons, highly penetrating subatomic particles created when cosmic rays strike Earth’s atmosphere, to search for hidden chambers within one of the pyramids of Giza.

These muon particles are heavyweight cousins of electrons that travel close to the speed of light. They can penetrate through many meters of solid rock, including the limestone and granite blocks used to build the pyramids. But some of the muons will be absorbed by this dense material, meaning that they can be used to essentially “X-ray” a pyramid, revealing its inner structure. So in 1968, Alvarez and his colleagues began making muon measurements from a chamber located at the base of the Pyramid of Khafre.

They didn’t find a hidden chamber, but they did confirm the feasibility of what has come to be called muon tomography. Physicists have since used the technique to discover hidden access shafts above tunnels, study magma chambers within volcanos, and even probe the damaged reactors at Fukushima. And, in 2017, muon measurements finally revealed a hidden chamber in one of the pyramids of Giza—just not the pyramid that Alvarez had chosen to explore.

You too can perform similar experiments with equipment that you can build yourself for only US $100 or so.

While some well-documented designs are available for low-cost muon detectors (in particular, the Cosmic Watch project from MIT), I decided to pursue a simpler—and slightly cheaper—approach....

....MUCH MORE