British Scientists Seek Missing WIMPs of
Universe Tue April 29,
2003 05:58 PM ET
By Jeremy Lovell
LONDON (Reuters) - British scientists equipped with state
of the art detectors deep underground in northern England have
begun a search for one of the most tantalizing secrets of the
universe -- known as Dark Matter.
"If we are successful in our quest then we are looking at a
place in the history books," Neil Spooner of Sheffield
University said on Tuesday. "This will be one of the great
discoveries of our time."
Teams of scientists around the world are racing to be the
first to discover the truth about Dark Matter, which cannot be
seen because it does not emit light. They believe it makes up
the vast majority of the universe.
Scientists say stars account for less than one percent of
the mass of the universe, with gas clouds and other objects
accounting for close to another five percent.
No one is quite sure what makes up the missing remainder,
which has been dubbed Dark Matter.
In a bid to identify the prime suspect known as Weakly
Interacting Massive Particles or WIMPs, British scientists
have installed highly sensitive detectors 3,600 feet down a
salt mine at Boulby on the North Yorkshire moors.
They are buried deep underground in an area of low natural
radioactivity where intervening rock should shield them from
interference and filter out cosmic bombardment.
"This is an outstanding research facility equipped with
some of the world's most sensitive Dark Matter detectors," Ian
Halliday, chief executive of the Particle Physics and
Astronomy Research Council, said in a statement.
"It is a crucial addition to the UK's resources in a
research field where British scientists are playing a
world-leading role -- the race by physicists around the globe
to discover these exotic, as yet undetected, Dark Matter
particles," he added.
The theory is that although billions of sub-atomic
particles called WIMPs are passing through the atmosphere and
the earth every second they only rarely encounter the nucleus
of an atom, making it judder slightly.
The detectors are designed to be able to detect these tiny
collisions which are so rare that scientists calculate that in
a 2.2 pound block of material less than one WIMP a day will
strike the nucleus of an atom and make it move.
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