BBC Science Focus

INSIDE INFORMATIO­N

Muon tomography is a non-invasive investigat­ion technique made possible by particles travelling through space at almost the speed of light. And it’s revealing secrets buried deep inside ancient pyramids and volcanoes

- WORDS ROBERT BANINO

By 13 October 2016 Mehdi Tayoubi already knew his ScanPyrami­ds project was on the right track. That was the day Tayoubi and his team met with a committee of Egyptologi­sts to tell them about the small, previously unknown cavity they’d found in the north face of the Pyramid of Khufu, also known as the Great Pyramid of Giza. The ScanPyrami­ds project had begun just 12 months earlier, but was already yielding promising results.

Then later, in 2017, it struck gold: a huge void was detected deep within the 4,500-year-old pyramid. Although the void’s precise orientatio­n was unknown, Tayoubi’s team was able to confirm that it was about 30 metres long and situated above the Grand Gallery – the corridor linking the Queen’s chamber to the chamber containing Pharaoh Khufu’s sarcophagu­s. It was the first major new structure discovered in the pyramid since the 19th Century.

“We don’t know whether this big void is horizontal or inclined. We don’t know if this void is made by one structure or several successive structures. What we are sure about is that this big void is there, that it is impressive, and that it was not expected – as far as I know – by any sort of theory,” said Tayoubi when the news broke in November 2017.

But perhaps more impressive than the two discoverie­s was the fact that they’d been made while the pyramid remained perfectly intact. There had been new no excavation or disassembl­y of the structure. No chamber walls were drilled through and no sealed corridors opened up. The ScanPyrami­ds team had peered deep into the limestone blocks stacked up to form the walls of the 140-metre-high tomb and identified hollows within them that nobody knew existed. And what made this astonishin­g feat possible was a technique known as muon tomography, which allows scientists to explore locations that have previously been out of reach.

IT CAME FROM OUTER SPACE…

Muon tomography is a little like space exploratio­n in reverse. Instead of using instrument­s constructe­d on Earth to investigat­e space, it relies on cosmic rays produced in space to delve into things on Earth.

Cosmic rays are high-energy particles that hurtle through space at near the speed of light. They’re produced by the Sun, supernovae events outside the Solar System and even the Big Bang. They’re travelling in every direction all the time and there are so many of them that they’re constantly colliding with the oxygen and nitrogen molecules in Earth’s atmosphere. At which point, they set off a cascade of other particles, much like a white ball breaking the pack of reds in a game of snooker.

“[When] a high-energy cosmic particle hits the upper atmosphere, it produces a large shower of particles,” explains Prof Ralf Kaiser, a physicist

“It was the first major new structure discovered in the pyramid since the 19th Century”

at the University of Glasgow. “Most of these particles are stopped in the atmosphere. But some of them make it all the way down to the ground. And those are typically muons.”

A muon is an elementary particle, like an electron but 200 times heavier. Being so heavy and travelling so fast gives them a greater ability to penetrate dense material than other types of radiation, such as X-rays or gamma rays. But unlike X-rays and gamma rays, cosmic ray muons don’t damage the material they pass through.

“[Muons can] cross tens of metres of concrete. They’ll also pass through your body without doing anything,” says Kaiser. “They’re ubiquitous, penetratin­g and cost-free. They’re everywhere and they’re part of the natural environmen­t.”

In short, muons are just the thing for getting a glimpse inside structures you can’t get into, structures like sealed chambers in pyramids, closed-off caverns in archaeolog­ical sites and conduits inside volcanoes. The trick to doing that however, is catching the muons that have passed through the structure and using them to create an image of what’s inside.

LOOKING FOR SHADOWS

Dr Giovanni Macedonio, the principal investigat­or of the MUon RAdiograph­y of VESuvius (MURAVES) project, likens the process to getting an X-ray. When there’s an object, let’s say your arm, between the source of the X-rays and the camera, your arm absorbs some of the X-rays passing through it. The different densities of the skin, muscles, blood vessels and bones determine how many of the X-rays reach the camera s|the Fenser those things are, the more : ra[s the[ aDsorD

“[Essentiall­y,] we see the shadows of the different parts,” says Macedonio. The lighter the shadows, the denser the part and, armed with that knowledge, it is possible to distinguis­h between the parts inside. The same principle applies to muon tomography and the objects, such as Mount Vesuvius, it’s used to investigat­e.

“Instead of X-rays, we have muons,” says Macedonio. “Muons are coming from all directions around Earth, but we’re interested in the ones that are travelling close to horizontal­ly, so they can penetrate the volcano. The muons that pass all the way through Vesuvius produce a shadow behind it.” By placing muon detectors nearby, Macedonio and his colleagues can generate an image of that shadow, study the densities of the materials depicted in it and begin to distinguis­h the structures inside Vesuvius.

But studying something as big as a volcano requires patience, because muons are tiny and only about 100 of them hit any given square metre per second. So although they may be constantly bombarding Earth, collecting enough of them to provide useful informatio­n on something the size of Vesuvius takes a while.

“The flux of muons is not strong,” says Macedonio. “Most of them are absorbed by the volcano so we do need a lot of time – we need months.”

So when you do eventually get a picture, what can you do with it? Can you use it to predict eruptions? No, not exactly. But what you can do is understand the relationsh­ip between the geometry of the volcanic conduits and the style of eruptions. In particular, what conditions may cause ash clouds (that can ground planes and collapse roofs) or pyroclasti­c flows (fast-moving, super-heated mixes of rock fragments and gases capable of burning anything in their path) if Vesuvius were to erupt. And if you combine this informatio­n with seismic and meteorolog­ical data, you can alert or evacuate anyone who might be in harm’s way when an eruption is due.

THE RIGHT PLACES TO LOOK Recent advances in imaging technology are enabling muon tomography to find a growing range of applicatio­ns (see ‘Structural integrity’, p52), but the technique isn’t new. The engineer EP George used it to check the amount of material above a mine in Australia in 1955, fewer than 20 years after the muon had been discovered (by Carl Anderson and Seth Neddermeye­r in 1936). And before the end of the 1960s the renowned American physicist Luis Alvarez was using muon tomography to look for hidden chambers in pyramids.

“Being so heavy and travelling so fast gives muons a greater ability to penetrate dense material than other types of radiation”

 ??  ?? Muons, produced by cosmic rays hitting molecules in the atmosphere, cascade to Earth, penetratin­g structures in their path. Those that aren’t absorbed by the structures can be detected by instrument­s positioned within or near the structures they pass through. MUON DETECTION
Muons, produced by cosmic rays hitting molecules in the atmosphere, cascade to Earth, penetratin­g structures in their path. Those that aren’t absorbed by the structures can be detected by instrument­s positioned within or near the structures they pass through. MUON DETECTION
 ??  ?? ABOVE
Some members of the ScanPyrami­ds team set up one of the project’s muon detectors in front of the north face of the Pyramid of Khufu
ABOVE Some members of the ScanPyrami­ds team set up one of the project’s muon detectors in front of the north face of the Pyramid of Khufu
 ??  ?? Additional muon detectors were placed within the Pyramid of Khufu, including this one positioned inside the Queen’s Chamber LEFT
Additional muon detectors were placed within the Pyramid of Khufu, including this one positioned inside the Queen’s Chamber LEFT
 ??  ?? The Mount Vesuvius volcano, another subject of muon tomography investigat­ion, looms over the Italian city of Naples BELOW
The Mount Vesuvius volcano, another subject of muon tomography investigat­ion, looms over the Italian city of Naples BELOW

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