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The Deep Underground Science and Engineering Laboratory

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2000 Renewed interest in a US Deep Underground Science Laboratory ... both in the cosmos and the laboratory (LHC,ILC) ... Induced Fracture Processes Laboratory ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Deep Underground Science and Engineering Laboratory


1
The Deep Underground Science and Engineering
Laboratory
Bernard Sadoulet Dept. of Physics /LBNL UC
Berkeley UC Institute for Nuclear and
Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology (INPAC)
  • History and process
  • The science
  • Infrastructure requirement
  • Implementation

2
The DUSEL Process
  • Motivations
  • Early 1980s first investigation (Nevada, San
    Jancinto)
  • 2000 Renewed interest in a US Deep Underground
    Science Laboratory
  • Rapid expansion of Nuclear and Particle
    Astrophysics
  • Potential availability of Homestake on a short
    time scale
  • Strong scientific support. A number of reports.
  • Recent realization that such a facility would
    bring tremendous opportunities to earth sciences,
    biology and engineering DUSEL
  • March 2004 New process put in place by NSF
  • Solicitation 1 Community wide study of
  • Scientific roadmap from Nuclear/Particle/Astro
    Physics to Geo Physics/Chemistry/Microbiology/Engi
    neering
  • Generic infrastructure requirements
  • Solicitation 2 Pre-selection of 3-5 sites
  • Proposals due February 28 2005
  • Solicitation 3
  • Selection of initial site(s)

3
Site Independent Goals
  • The best scientific case for DUSEL
  • The big questions
  • Roadmaps of class A experiments
  • Long term needs
  • Implementation parameters
  • Infrastructure requirements
  •  Modules (set of experiments sharing same
    infrastructure needs)
  • Generic management structure
  • Integration of science and education and
    involvement of local population
  • International context
  • Identify strategic aspects of a U.S. facility
  • Estimation of the space needs for first two
    decades
  • gtBuild up common language, consensus and
    synergies
  • clearly happening already (3 workshops)
  • Deliverables by summer 05
  • Printed report directed at generalists
  • Agencies
  • OMB/OSTP/Congress cf. Quantum Universe

4
Process
  • 6 PIs responsible for the study
  • in particular scientific quality/ objectivity
  • Bernard Sadoulet, UC Berkeley, Astrophysics/Cosmol
    ogy
  • Hamish Robertson, U. Washington, Nuclear Physics
  • Eugene Beie,r U. of Pennsylvania, Particle
    Physics
  • Charles Fairhurst, U. of Minnesota,
    geology/engineering
  • Tullis Onstott, Princeton, geomicrobiology
  • James Tiedje, Michigan State, microbiology
  • 14 working groups Workshops
  • Infrastructure requirements/management
  • Education and outreach
  • 2 consultation groups
  • The site consultation group (Solicitation 2
    sites)
  • Endorsement of the PIs and general approach
  • Input on scientific/technical questions important
    to the sites
  • Competition between sites
  • The initiative coordination group major
    stakeholders (e.g. National Labs)
  • Coordination with other major initiatives
  • Major facilitator of involvement of other
    agencies

5
Status/Plans See www.dusel.org
  • 3 workshops
  • Berkeley Aug 04 mutual discovery of Physics and
    Earth Sciences
  • Blacksburg Nov 04 big questions in Earth
    Sciences
  • Boulder Jan 05 fundamental biology,
    international aspects
  • common language, modules, schedule
  • Methodology
  • Infrastructure matrices
  • Survey of the demand for DUSEL 1st decade and 2nd
    decade
  • Rescaling for likely evolution of community and
    budgets
  • Start real work from working groups after Feb 28
  • Final workshop in DC area July 15
  • General discussion of a draft of overall report
  • Information of agency people
  • August-September
  • Convergence on wording
  • External review
  • Glossy report fall 05

6
Major Questions in Physics (1)
  • What are the properties of the neutrinos?
  • Are neutrinos their own antiparticle? The answer
    to this question is a key ingredient in the
    formulation of a new Standard Model'', and can
    only be obtained by the study of neutrinoless
    double beta decay.
  • What is the remaining, and presently unknown,
    mixing angle q13 between neutrino mass
    eigenstates?
  • What is the hierarchy of masses?
  • Is there significant violation of the CP symmetry
    among the neutrinos?

7
Double beta decay
  • Many new experiments gearing up to test this
    claim and go beyond it
  • Major US efforts
  • Majorana expt- 500 kg Ge76 (86)
  • EXO - 1-ton LXe TPC

Majorana Experiment
8
Major Questions in Physics (1)
  • What are the properties of the neutrinos?
  • Are neutrinos their own antiparticle? The answer
    to this question is a key ingredient in the
    formulation of a new Standard Model'', and can
    only be obtained by the study of neutrinoless
    double beta decay.
  • What is the remaining, and presently unknown,
    mixing angle q13 between neutrino mass
    eigenstates?
  • What is the hierarchy of masses?
  • Is there significant violation of the CP symmetry
    among the neutrinos?
  • Do protons decay?
  • It is expected that baryonic matter is unstable
    at some level and the lifetime for proton decay
    is a hallmark of theories beyond the Standard
    Model.
  • These questions relate immediately to the
    completion of our understanding of particle and
    nuclear physics, and to the mystery of why the
    universe contains much more matter than
    antimatter.

9
Nucleon decay long-baseline ?
LANNDD - Liquid Argon Neutrino and Nucleon Decay
Detector
  • Large multipurpose detectors
  • Long-baseline neutrinos
  • Proton decay
  • Supernova observatory

UNO 20 SuperK (fid.)
Water cherenkov
10
Major Questions in Physics (2)
  • What is the nature of the dark matter in the
    universe?
  • Is it comprised of weakly interacting massive
    particles (WIMPs) of a type not presently known,
    but predicted by theories such as Supersymmetry?
  • Goal observe both in the cosmos and the
    laboratory (LHC,ILC)
  • .

11
Large mass WIMP detectors
  • Cryogenic Detectors
  • CDMS II, EDELWEISS II, CRESST II
  • Similar reach with complementary
  • assets
  • Xenon
  • Low pressure TPC

12
Major Questions in Physics (2)
  • What is the nature of the dark matter in the
    universe?
  • Is it comprised of weakly interacting massive
    particles (WIMPs) of a type not presently known,
    but predicted by theories such as Supersymmetry?
  • Goal observe both in the cosmos and the
    laboratory (LHC,ILC)
  • .
  • What is the low-energy spectrum of neutrinos from
    the sun?
  • Solar neutrinos have been important in providing
    new information not only about the sun but also
    about the fundamental properties of neutrinos.

13
Solar neutrinos
  • Possible future US Program
  • Heron - rotons in LHe
  • Clean - scintillation in LNe
  • LENS - liquid scintillator

14
Physics needs low cosmic-ray rates
15
Subsurface Geoscience
  • How are the Underground Processes Changing the
    Earth
  • How does the rock flows and cracks at depth?
  • Fundamental Processes at Depth
  • How are the coupled Hydro-Thermal-Mechanical-Chemi
    cal-Biological (HTMCB) processes in fractured
    rock masses vary as function of the physical and
    time scales involved. Cannot be done in
    laboratory!
  • Transparent Earth
  • Can progress in geophysical sensing methods and
    computational advances be applied to make the
    earth transparent, i.e. to see real-time
    interaction of processes and their consequences
    in the solid earth?
  • Relationships between surface measurements and
    subsurface deformations and stresses
  • How does the Earth Crust Move?
  • What controls the onset and propagation of
    seismic slip on a fault?
  • How are surface deformations and stresses related
    to their subsurface counterparts, and to tectonic
    plate motions?
  • Can earthquake slip be predicted can it be
    controlled?
  • Need for long term access as deep as possible
  • Observatories in particular at largest depth
  • Laboratories where we can act on the rock

16
Rock Mass Strength-Unknown
17
Correlation Surface -Underground
18
Induced Fracture Processes Laboratory
  • Evaluate and refine models of fracture initiation
    and propagation
  • Resource recovery
  • CO2 sequestration
  • Waste isolation
  • Examine effects on proximal fluid flow and
    transport including proppants
  • Wellbore interaction effects
  • Pressure solution in fractures
  • Examine roles of different propellants
  • Examine roles of fractures in bacterial
    colonization
  • Examine the long-term stability and durability of
    underground openings

http//www.earthlab.org/
Courtesy of Derek Ellsworth
19
Deep Coupled Processes Laboratory
  • Characterize coupled-processes that affect
    critical environmental engineering, and complex
    subsurface Earth processes
  • CO2 sequestration
  • Waste isolation
  • In situ mining
  • Mineralization and ore body formation
  • Characterize coupled processes under ambient
    conditions
  • Chemical fate and transport including
    dissolution/precipitation and modification of
    mechanical and transport parameters
  • Multiphase flow and transport
  • Microbial colonization

http//www.earthlab.org/
Courtesy of Derek Ellsworth
20
Subsurface GeoEngineering
  • Importance for a number of applications
  • groundwater flow
  • contaminant transport
  • long-term isolation of hazardous and toxic
    wastes, carbon sequestration and hydrocarbon
    storage underground
  • ore forming processes
  • energetic slip on faults and fractures stability
    of underground excavations
  • Mastery of the rock
  • What are the limits to large stable excavations
    at depth?
  • Currently
  • Petroleum boreholes 0.1m Ø. at 10km
  • Mine shafts 5m Ø at 4km.
  • DUSEL physics excavations 10-40m Ø at
    1-3km
  • Resources
  • Origin
  • Discovery

Need for long term access as deep as
possible DUSEL nearly unique in the world
21
What will we need to do better in 20 years?Grand
Challenges..
  • Resource Recovery
  • Locate resource
  • Access quickly and at low cost
  • Recover 100 resource at chosen timescale
  • No negative environmental effect
  •  Waste Containment/Disposal
  • Characterize host at high resolution
  • Access and inter quickly at low cost
  • Inter completely or define fugitive concentration
  • output with time
  • Underground Construction
  • Characterize inexpensively at high resolution
  • Excavate quickly and inexpensively
  • Provide minimum support for maximum design life

Courtesy of Derek Ellsworth
22
Major Questions in Geomicrobiology
  • How does the interplay between biology and
    geology shape the subsurface? Role of microbes in
    HTMCB
  • How deeply does life extend into the Earth?
  • What are the lower limits of life in the
    biosphere? What is the temperature barrier, the
    influence of pressure, the interplay of energy
    restrictions with the above? The subsurface
    biomass may be the most extensive on earth but
    samples so far are too few.
  • What fuels the deep biosphere?
  • Do deep microbial ecosystems exist that are
    dependent upon geochemically generated energy
    sources ("geogas" H2, CH4, etc.) and independent
    from photosynthesis. How do such systems
    function, their members interact to sustain the
    livelihood?
  • Need for long term access as deep as possible
  • In many cases need horizontal probes
    (pressure)
  • Deeper bores

23
Variation of Life with Depth
Cells/ml or Cells/g
107
105
103
101
0
1
2
Depth (km)
3
4
?
5
S. African data Onstott et al. 1998
6
Fig. 2 of Earthlab report
24
Major Questions in Biology
  • What can we learn on evolution and genome
    dynamics?
  • Microbes may have been isolated from the surface
    gene pool for very long periods of time. Can we
    observe ancient life?
  • How different are this dark life from microbes on
    the surface? Unexpected and biotechnologically
    useful enzymes?
  • How do they evolve with very low population
    density, extremely low metabolism rate and high
    longevity? Role of Phages
  • Did life on the earth's surface come from
    underground?
  • Does the deep subsurface harbor primitive life
    processes today?
  • Has the subsurface acted as refuge during
    extinctions.
  • What "signs of subsurface life" should we search
    for on Mars?
  • Is there dark life as we don't know it?
  • Does unique biochemistry, e.g. non-nucleic acid
    based, and molecular signatures exist in isolated
    subsurface niches?
  • Requires systematic sampling at various depths
  • Attention to contamination issues
  • Long term observation in their own environment

25
Answers require DUSEL (1)
  • Very Deep 6000 mwe (meters water equivalent,
    about the same as feet of rock)
  • Double beta decay
  • Solar neutrinos
  • Dark matter detectors (may be 4000 mwe)
  • Construction technology for deep waste
    sequestration
  • Monitor and relate surface deformations and
    stresses to their subsurface counterparts.
  • Determine processes controlling maximum depth of
    subsurface biosphere and perhaps discover life
    not as we know it.
  • Access to high ambient temperature and stress
    similar to seismogenic zone for in situ HTCMB
    experiments.
  • Intermediate depths automatic
  • Some solar neutrinos
  • Radioactive screening/prototyping
  • Fabrication Assembly area
  • Construction technology for modest depth
    applications
  • Monitor and relate surface deformations and
    stresses to their subsurface counterparts.

26
Answers require DUSEL (2)
  • Very Large Caverns (1,000,000 m3) at 2000-4000
    mwe
  • Proton decay
  • Long-baseline neutrino physics (q13, masses, CP)
  • - 3D time monitoring of deformation at space and
    time scale intermediate between bench-tops and
    tectonic plates.
  • Very Large Block Experiments (100x100x100 m3)
    spanning the whole depth range
  • HTCMB experiments under in situ conditions in
    pristine environment over multiple correlation
    lengths with mass and energy balance.
  • See real-time interaction of HTCMB processes
    using geophysical and computational advances and
    MINEBACK to validate imaging.
  • Perform sequestration studies and observe
    interaction with surface bio-, hydro- and
    atmosphere

27
Exciting Science and Engineering
  • Compelling questions A snap shot
  • Neutrinos, Dark Matter, Stability of Matter
  • The Ever Changing Earth Fundamental Processes
    and Tectonics
  • Transparent Earth, Mastery of the Rock, Resources
  • The exploration of subsurface biosphere limits,
    metabolism, role in geological processes
  • New questions on origins, evolution and
    biochemistry diversity
  • Multidisciplinary
  • Not just a juxtaposition for political
    convenience
  • Clarity about differences e.g. earth scientists
    prefer variety of sites including hard rock and
    sedimentary if possible ? physicists
  • Learning how to live together e.g. tracers in
    water used for exploratory drilling, rock
    deformation laboratories far from observatories
  • Overlap of questions between fields and between
    fundamental and applied
  • Multidisciplinary approaches e.g.
    geo-micro-biologists
  • New Synergies
  • Instrumentation of the rock prior to construction
    of physics cavities
  • Low radioactivity methods, instrumentation, data
    acquisition
  • Marvelous education and outreach opportunity
  • Training of a new generation of multidiciplinary
    scientists and engineers

28
Science-Methods-Applications
  • Overlap is testimony of the richness of the field
  • Opportunity for multiple advocacy
  • NSF-DOE- Congress - Industry
  • Experts-other scientists- Public at large

29
International Aspects
  • International Science and Engineering !
  • Not only in physics and astronomy
  • But also geo sciences (relationships with URL)
  • geo-microbiology is a new frontier
  • Strategic advantage of a U.S. DUSEL
  • A premier facility on U.S. soil will
  • more readily put U.S. teams at core of major
    projects
  • attract the most exciting projects
  • maximize impact on training of scientists and
    engineers public
  • However we should check our intuition that there
    is enough demand
  • DUSEL complementary to other major U.S.
    initiatives
  • e.g. Earth-Scope, Secure Earth
  • An existing infrastructure could be a major
    asset in competition for proton decay/neutrino
    detector
  • At same time, considerable flexibility available
    in implementation
  • To conform with evolution of science, budget
    realities, and international Mega-Science
    coordination
  • Excavate as we go (? Gran Sasso)
  • Single site or multiple sites (in which case
    common management)
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