Print Version:  More Info 
You will be directed to Springer for print volume ordering
   Online Version: 



Next Generation Nucleon Decay and Neutrino Detector

Milind V. Diwan, Brookhaven National Laboratory, Upton, NY, USA ; Chang Kee Jung, SUNY at Stonybrook, Department of Physics and Astronomy, HEP Group, Stonybrook, NY, USA


AIP Conference Proceedings 533


Conference Location and Date: Stonybrook, NY, 23-25 September 1999


Subseries: Nuclear and High Energy Physics

Published ; ISBN 1-56396-956-4, One Volume, Print; 258 pages; 8.5 x 11 inches, single column;

Readership: students and researchers interested in particle physics and astrophysics; scientific policy makers

Even after more than 40 years of experimentation we have not observed the decay of the basic constituent of everyday matter: the proton. So far, the proton appears to be completely stable. This is very puzzling because reasonable models of physics predict that protons after living very long should break apart into lighter particles such as electrons, muons, and pions. Over the last several decades both the experiments and the theory of particles have become increasingly sophisticated. The latest and best experiment (Super-Kamiokande) is in the Kamioka mine in Japan: it has monitored 20,000 tons of water for more than 3 years to see decays of protons; none has been found. Yet the sheer size and precision of this experiment has allowed it to find evidence for neutrino mass by observing oscillations of neutrinos generated in the earth's atmosphere by high energy cosmic rays from outer space. Similar detectors in the past have observed neutrinos from the Sun as well as from Supernova explosions. This workshop was intended to find the next step in this process of experimentation. Should we continue the search for proton decay? The answer from this conference seems to be a definite yes! However, the answer for what sensitivity to achieve seems to be mixed. Regardless of the exact answer about the type and size of the next detector, this project will be much larger than any of the previous projects. Therefore we need to create a consensus in the international physics community and also explore the likely synergistic impact of such a project on other fields of research, such as neutrino physics and astrophysics.

Related AIP Titles:

CP# Editor(s) Title
1011Sakai, et al.NEW FACET OF THREE NUCLEON FORCE - 50 YEARS OF FUJITA MIYAZAWA THREE NUCLEON FORCE (FM50): Proceedings of the International Symposium on New Facet of Three Nucleon Force
944WilkesNEXT GENERATION NUCLEON DECAY AND NEUTRINO DETECTORS: NNN06
897LoaizaTOPICAL WORKSHOP ON LOW RADIOACTIVITY TECHNIQUES: LRT 2006
785Cleveland, et al.TOPICAL WORKSHOP ON LOW RADIOACTIVITY TECHNIQUES: LRT 2004
674Villaseñor / VillanuevaINSTRUMENTATION IN ELEMENTARY PARTICLE PHYSICS: First ICFA Instrumentation School at the ICFA Instrumentation Center in Morelia
655Nieves / LeungPARTICLE PHYSICS AND COSMOLOGY: Third Tropical Workshop on Particle Physics and Cosmology - Neutrinos, Branes, and Cosmology
624Kursunoglu, et al.COSMOLOGY AND ELEMENTARY PARTICLE PHYSICS: Coral Gables Conference on Cosmology and Elementary Particle Physics

 

 

ADVERTISEMENT
Featured Jobs
University of Exeter
GBR - Devon
Chair and Lecturer (2 posts)

Sandia National Laboratories
US - NM - Albuquerque
Post Doc – Nuclear/ Nanoparticle Materials

Syracuse University
US - NY - Syracuse
Postdoc in Experimental CM Physics

University of Rochester
US - NY - Rochester
Biomedical Optics

More Jobs