Title: SALSA Collaboration
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2SALSA Collaboration
3IceCube Antarctic Neutrino Detection Project
(In Progress)
- 80 boreholes down 2.4 km into Antarctic ice
- 4800 light detectors (photomultiplier tubes)
distributed over a cubic kilometer volume - approximately 275M budget
- First light expected in 2010
4Science Motivation for a Salt Dome Neutrino
Detector
- 40 years of high energy cosmic particle
observations - Confirm a sparse but significant background
rain of particles - Ridiculously high energies--single protons with
tens of Joules or more, equivalent to a Nolan
Ryan fastball - If all of the protons in a fastball had the same
energy it would destroy the earth!
galactic
Galactic
Extragalactic
extragalactic
- Sources of the particles are completely unknown
- Suspected sources are too far away--protons of
these energies would be absorbed by collisions on
the way - The collision process (Greisen, Zatseptin,
Kuzmin, GZK 1966) itself makes neutrinos as a
byproduct
5Science Motivation for a Salt Dome Neutrino
Detector (Contd)
- Neutrinos produced by GZK process can identify
sources of the highest energy processes in the
universe - 1 Million to 1 billion times the Tevatron,
largest earth accelerator - Neutrinos ( ne nm nt ) are the least
well-understood of the lepton family of
particles cousins to the electron, muon, and tau
particles - Neutrinos interact rarely with normal
matter--requires a large target volume, montored
via some secondary emission, to which the matter
is transparent
6Particle Astrophysics/Cosmology with a Salt Dome
Neutrino Detector
- Measure the cosmic ray maximum acceleration
energy - Particles we see now are only a lower limit
- Determine nature of high energy sources at early
phases of the universe, when it was - Can detect effects of Dark Energy in the
universe - A kind of universal antimatter that seems to
dominate gravity throughout the universe--70 of
its content! - May see exotic relics of the Big Bang itself!
7Cross Section of Typical Salt Dome
8Salt Dome Shower Array Concept
- Salt domes are known since 1960s to have
extremely high radio transparency (GPR) - Investigated in early petroleum exploration, and
salt mining studies - Allows radio antennas embedded in salt to hear
events from far away, get directions from radio
pulse timing and intensity
9In situ Examples of Salt Dome Radio Wave
Attenuation
10Proposed Node Configuration
11Requirements for a Salt Dome Neutrino Detector
- Relatively pure, dry salt, in a stable,
homogeneous structure - Most salt domes satisfy this, but not all (Weeks
Island dome--wet salt) - Large, accessible volume 20 km3 of salt within
3km of surface - Shallow domes are preferable to reduce
drilling/casing costs
- Borehole spacing of order the radio attenuation
length - 250m is current best estimate, thus 60-100
boreholes and strings required to instrument a
large salt dome - Goal is roughly the same instrumented volume as a
cube about 2.5 km on a side - Neutrinos also interact within surrounding volume
to make observable events
12Examples of Gulf Coast Salt Dome Halite Purity
13Acoustic Detection
example pressure sensor
Blue numbers are Log(Energy/eV) marking detection
contours range vs. Energy (estimate)
- Pancake emission pattern
- Peak emission in 10-100 kHz range
- Acoustic sensitivity still uncertain Need to
measure attenuation lengths and background noise
with real boreholes.
14Geological Considerations
- Adequately mapped salt geometry
- Shallow piercement (minimal overburden)
- Well understood aquifer zone(s)
- Modest structural relief _at_ top of cap rock
- Structurally/lithologically simple cap rock
- Minor faulting, homogeneous cap rock
- Stable (stress equilibrium)
15Drilling Operations
- Surface access
- Build roads
- Prepare drill site Build pad, cellar storage
- Mob/rig up
- Install flow line
- Mix spud mud
- Spud/drill
- Drill surface hole
- Run and cement surface pipe
- Install well head
- Install and test BOPs
16Drilling Operations (contd)
- Drill intermediate hole
- Run and cement intermediate casing (9 5/8)
- Drill production hole
- Run and cement production string (7)
- Drill Salt Section
- Use oil base mud
- Completion
- Displace mud with completion fluid (diesel)
- Install christmas tree
- Rig down/demob
- Clear location
- Secure well
17Typical Normal Pressure Well Diagram
18Estimated Drilling Costs
19Cost Reduction Factors
- Volume Discount (50 wells)
- Tubulars and Wellhead equipment 10-15
- Drilling rig rate discount 10-15
- Wellsite 20-30
- Mud and Chemicals 60
- Efficiency (learning curve)
- Reduction in number of days per well 40
- Overall Savings per well 37
20Logistical (Cost) Considerations
- Simple physical access to drill sites
- Minimal environmental restrictions
- Minimal surface/mineral rights considerations
- Clear title(s)
- Long term lease rentals
- Surface damages
- Reclamation
- No active oil gas drilling!
21U.S Gulf coast salt domes
- Gulf coast Salt dome demographics
- Several hundred knownmany via petroleum
exploration and production - Typical 2-3 km diameters, 5-15 km deep
- 30 km3 salt in top 3 km for many domes
Hockley dome/mine
Houston
New Orleans
22SalSA Status Plans
- RD funds (170K/yr combined) at Univ. Hawaii and
UCLA since 2002 - Collaboration kick-off meeting in Feb. of this
year - June 20 (this month) Meet with probable sponsor
(DOE Office of High Energy Physics for briefing
on plans and scope of project - End of (this) Summer 2005 submit Phase I
proposal (3-5M) - 2006 3-5 boreholes in 3-5 salt domes, test salt
purity and radio clarity - Late 2006, early 2007 Embed a 3 or 4 string
array in the best of the salt dome sample,
recover complete cores from each hole - Late 2007, submit Phase II proposal (50M)
- 60-100 additional boreholes and strings in
selected dome if Phase I is successful, planned
for 10 years operation - Approval by mid-2008, construction 2008-2011.
23Why Should DOSECC Be Interested in SalSA?
- Most comprehensive drilling ever in a salt
dome--by at least an order of magnitude - Dense, gridded uniform sampling of a geologic
structure likely to find trends/patterns or
physical parameters that would be inaccessible to
other methods - Cores of many if not all holes planned over
length of salt borehole - Boreholes will be maintained open as long as
possible, can be a resource for follow-up
investigations - Not competing with primary sponsors in Geological
sciences, and likely sponsors (NSF Physics or DOE
Office of High Energy Physics) may support
relevant geology research
24Salt Dome Inclusions Sources of Paleo Data
- Inclusions are a mysterious world!
- E. Roedder 1984, Am. Miner. 69, 413.
- Entrained fluids and gases from original Louann
(Jurassic) salt bed - Brines brine solutions w/ sometimes strange
isotopic ratios - Methane and CO2
- Can they contain paleo-biological material?
- Cypress Creek Dome core contained one sample with
anomalously high iron sulphate - Could meteor residues survive in halite cores?
25In Conclusion
- We solicit collaborators from the earth sciences
- Phase I proposal is open for co-investigators
- We can (obviously) use help on
- understanding the earth science potential
- optimizing drilling techniques/costs
- We solicit endorsement of SalSA by DOSECC if it
is deemed appropriate by the council - We welcome expertise and advice from the DOSECC
community
26Primary SalSA Contacts
- David Saltzberg
- UCLA Dept. of Physics/154705475 Portola
PlazaLos Angeles, CA 90095-1547office
310-206-4542cell 310-433-3873email
saltzbrg_at_physics.ucla.edu - Peter Gorham
- Watanabe Hall 324Dept. of Physics2505 Correa
Rd.Honolulu, HI 96822office 808-956-9157email
gorham_at_phys.hawaii.edu
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28Salt domes throughout the world
Halite crystals
Qeshm Island, Hormuz strait, Iran, 7km diameter
Isacksen salt dome, Elf Ringnes Island, Canada 8
by 5km
Louisiana delta area
- Rock salt known since 1960s to be extremely
radio transparent - Borehole mine GPR used to see flank reflections
at km distances - typical 20-40 km3 of halite in top 3km
- Equivalent mass of to up to 100 cubic km of
water or ice
29Borehole radar on dome flank
- Pine Prairie dome, LA northern extreme of
Louisiana salt dome region - Holser et al 1972 used dipole helix antennas at
230MHz in a 5 diameter sonde to map the flank
of the dome (1 microsec pulses) - Most data within 150m of edge of dome (anhydrite
content usually increases) - Saw attenuation lengths of 60-220m, 100m on
average - Flank location confirmed by retrieved samples
when flank was intercepted