View Astronomy Picture of the Day Archives
Aug 6, 2018

Live: Cosmic Rays from Minnesota
Image Credit & Copyright: Astronomy Picture of the Day -- http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
Courtesy of http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html

Live: Cosmic Rays from Minnesota
Image Credit & Copyright: Astronomy Picture of the Day -- http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
Courtesy of http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
Cosmic rays from outer space go through your body every second.
Typically, they do you no harm.
The featured image shows some of these fast moving particles as streaks going through Fermilab's
NOvA Far Detector located in Ash River,
Minnesota,
USA.
Although the image updates every 15 seconds, it only shows
cosmic rays that occurred over a (changing) small fraction of that time, and mostly shows only one type of particle:
muons.
The NOvA
Far Detector's main purpose is not to detect cosmic rays, though, but rather
neutrinos from the
NuMI
beam shot through the Earth from
Fermilab near
Chicago,
Illinois, USA,
810 kilometers away.
Only a few
neutrino events are expected in NOvA per week, though.
The NuMI /
NOvA experiment is allowing humanity to better explore the
nature of neutrinos,
for example how frequently they change type during their trip.
Cosmic rays themselves were
discovered
only about 100 years ago and can not only
alter computer memory,
but may have helped to create
DNA
mutations that resulted in, eventually,
humans.



