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  2. Homestake experiment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homestake_experiment

    The Homestake experiment was followed by other experiments with the same purpose, such as Kamiokande in Japan, SAGE in the former Soviet Union, GALLEX in Italy, Super Kamiokande, also in Japan, and SNO (Sudbury Neutrino Observatory) in Ontario, Canada. SNO was the first detector able to detect neutrino oscillation, solving the solar neutrino ...

  3. Solar neutrino - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_neutrino

    A solar neutrino is a neutrino originating from nuclear fusion in the Sun's core, and is the most common type of neutrino passing through any source observed on Earth at any particular moment. [ citation needed ] Neutrinos are elementary particles with extremely small rest mass and a neutral electric charge .

  4. List of neutrino experiments - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_neutrino_experiments

    Neutrino experiments are scientific studies investigating the properties of neutrinos, which are subatomic particles that are very difficult to detect due to their weak interactions with matter. Neutrino experiments are essential for understanding the fundamental properties of matter and the universe's behaviour at the subatomic level.

  5. Borexino - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Borexino

    Borexino is a deep underground particle physics experiment to study low energy (sub-MeV) solar neutrinos.The detector is the world's most radio-pure liquid scintillator calorimeter and is protected by 3,800 meters of water-equivalent depth (a volume of overhead rock equivalent in shielding power to that depth of water).

  6. Sudbury Neutrino Observatory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sudbury_Neutrino_Observatory

    The first measurements of the number of solar neutrinos reaching the Earth were taken in the 1960s, and all experiments prior to SNO observed a third to a half fewer neutrinos than were predicted by the Standard Solar Model. As several experiments confirmed this deficit the effect became known as the solar neutrino problem.

  7. Soviet–American Gallium Experiment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soviet–American_Gallium...

    The experiment had begun to measure the solar neutrino capture rate with a target of gallium metal in December 1989 and continued to run in August 2011 with only a few brief interruptions in the timespan. As of 2013 is the experiment was described as "being continued" [1] with the latest published data

  8. Sanford Underground Research Facility - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sanford_Underground...

    Davis's solar neutrino detector. Solar Neutrino Experiment (Davis Experiment/Homestake Experiment): Raymond Davis Jr., a pioneer in neutrino research, built a solar neutrino detector deep underground at Sanford Lab. [15] When he discovered only a third of what had been predicted, he inadvertently created what came to be called the “solar ...

  9. GALLEX - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GALLEX

    GALLEX or Gallium Experiment was a radiochemical neutrino detection experiment that ran between 1991 and 1997 at the Laboratori Nazionali del Gran Sasso (LNGS). This project was performed by an international collaboration of French, German, Italian, Israeli, Polish and American scientists led by the Max-Planck-Institut für Kernphysik Heidelberg.