WE-P4-1 14:15
RICHARD JAMES FORD, Laurentian University
SNOLAB - Design And Status Of A New Underground Laboratory
SNOLAB is a new
underground international science laboratory under construction two kilometers
below ground near Sudbury, Canada, in the INCO Creighton nickel mine
approximately 400 km northwest of Toronto. SNOLAB is an expansion of the existing facilities at the Sudbury
Neutrino Observatory (SNO), which is a 1000-tonne solar neutrino detector in
operation since 1999. The underground
space will contain 53,000 sq-ft for experiments and supporting
infrastructure and the entire facility will be operated as a clean-room to
achieve a low radioactive environment.
The depth underground is unprecedented for a facility of this size, and
provides shielding from comics rays to allow detection of rare particle physics
interactions. The scientific program at
SNOLAB will emphasize topics in particle astrophysics requiring this increased
sensitivity due to the depth and the clean environment. These topics include measurements of low
energy solar neutrinos, cosmic dark matter searches, neutrino-less double beta
decay, and the detection of geo-neutrinos, supernova neutrinos and reactor
neutrinos. Other interdisciplinary
fields will also make use of the facility, including seismology, studies in
geophysics and the biological study of underground life forms. Excavation of the underground space is
presently underway and is being done in two phases. The first phase adding 27,000 sq-ft will be completed,
outfitted and operational in mid-2007.
The second phase is being designed and is not yet funded. The SNOLAB facility also includes a surface
building to provide chemistry and development laboratories, clean room areas, a
warehouse, machine shop, auditorium, offices and meeting rooms. The surface building was completed and
occupied in August 2005. In this
talk I will introduce and briefly survey the physics and status of the main
topics to be studied by the experiments to be constructed at SNOLAB. I will then describe the design of the
laboratory, and report on the current excavation and construction status.