Cosmic ray research will shine at facility

Published: Monday, Aug. 30 2004 12:05 a.m. MDT

Work begins on a new cosmic ray observatory at Black Rock Mesa, 15 miles southwest of Delta. Construction will continue over next two years.

Kai Martens, U of U

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A search of the universe has begun in western Utah with the down-to-earth simplicity of construction frameworks, pouring concrete and trenching the desert's rocky gray soil.

The first component of a $12 million to $18 million observatory is under construction at Black Rock Mesa, 15 miles southwest of Delta. Many other parts will be built over the next two years, in a search for clues about high-energy cosmic rays.

Japan is providing $12 million for the project while the University of Utah and other American universities are seeking $6 million in federal funding, according to a U. press release.

Cosmic rays are particles from space that slam into Earth's atmosphere at high velocities. Little is known about those of the highest energy levels.

One particle detected by the U. "Fly's Eye" observatory in 1991 carried the energy of 300 billion billion electron volts, the release points out. It adds, "billion twice is correct." That single subatomic particle carried as much wallop as a fast-pitched baseball.

According to the U., some ideas are that high-energy cosmic rays result from the physics of string theory; or they might be remnants of particles that flew out during the "big bang," the sudden creation of the universe.

Two other segments of the observatory are to be built on Long Ridge and at a site between the Drum and Little Drum mountains. (Long Ridge is close to the famous Antelope Spring trilobite beds.)

These sites will house "fluorescence detectors" to record the glow of cosmic rays as they streak through the atmosphere.

In addition, a ground array of 576 scintillation detectors will be built. These detectors, placed on stands about two feet tall, will be evenly spaced throughout an 18-mile by 22-mile parcel of desert west of Hinckley, Millard County. They will register the impact of particle showers resulting from the cosmic ray colliding with the gases of the atmosphere.

Five communications towers also are planned.

Official groundbreaking for the Black Rock Mesa facility was on Saturday, although that wasn't the start of building.

"There's a lot of construction already going on," said Kai Martens, assistant professor of physics at the University of Utah and one of the project's leaders. "It was a belated groundbreaking."

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