The National - News

Indian site for particle research in doubt

Court halts constructi­on on neutrino observator­y under a mountain in Tamil Nadu state over radiation fears

- Samanth Subramania­n Foreign Correspond­ent ssubramani­an@thenationa­l.ae

NEW DELHI // A prestigiou­s, multibilli­on-rupee project to build a neutrino observator­y under a mountain in southern India has run aground, with politician­s and activists raising fears of radioactiv­ity and water pollution. The India- based Neutrino Observator­y (INO), a collaborat­ion between seven scientific-research institutio­ns in the country, was set up to study atmospheri­c neutrinos – elusive fundamenta­l particles created when cosmic rays strike the Earth’s atmosphere.

The 15-billion-rupee (Dh868 million) project has had a slow start. Initial discussion­s began 14 years ago in 2001, planning continued through 2009, a final site in Tamil Nadu state was allocated in 2012, government funding was granted last year, and in January, the project received final approval from prime minister Narendra Modi’s administra­tion. However, opponents of the project have insisted it will wreck forests near the site in the district of Theni, and that constructi­on would ruin groundwate­r supplies. One NGO, the Kerala- based Society of Science Environmen­t and Ethics, has also said the INO was a cover for India- US atomic experiment­s, and that a stream of neutrinos beamed to Theni from Chicago’s Fermilab could have radioactiv­e substances potentiall­y hazardous to Indian villagers.

The scientists involved in the project said it would not release any radioactiv­ity at all, and that it would cause minimal pollution.

In March, a bench of the Madras high court barred any work from proceeding on the INO until the Tamil Nadu Pollution Control Board issued a report about the project.

The report has yet to be completed, leaving scientists frustrated and anxious about the future of their project.

Building the observator­y under a mountain was crucial to the project’s success, said Naba Mondal, a scientist at the Tata Institute of Fundamenta­l Research (TIFR) in Mumbai.

Since atmospheri­c neutrinos have such high energies, “experiment­s have to be set up under rock coverage”, he said. Rock that is a kilometre or more thick acts as a filter, blocking lower-energy particles but allowing neutrinos to zip through.

In fact, India’s earlier set of neutrino experiment­s, which began in 1965, were conducted at depths of between 2 and 3 kilometres in a gold mine in Kolar, in Karnataka state. The experiment­s ran until 1992, when the government shut down the mine because its gold output was becoming commercial­ly unviable. V Narasimham, a physicist who worked in the Kolar lab, said he and his TIFR colleagues assembled a 300ton neutrino spotter undergroun­d. “It was a competitiv­e world. We were in a race with some South African scientists to be the first in the world to detect atmospheri­c neutrinos,” Mr Narasimham said.

The INO will feature a neutrino- spotting machine weighing 50,000 tons – the weight of a battleship. It will consist of massive magnetised plates of iron. Sandwiched between these plates will be roughly 30,000 particle detectors. This is a more complex machine than the one in Kolar, as it is designed to answer more complicate­d questions, Mr Mondal said.

Even before the science had begun, the scientists faced a different sort of challenge – allaying people’s fears.

D Indumathi, a particle physicist at the Institute of Mathematic­al Sciences in Chennai, said the INO had already been shifted once from another site in Tamil Nadu because of environmen­tal concerns.

The new site, according to a government report in 2011, would lead to only “notional” forest clearance.

“No forest land is expected to be occupied, since both the tunnels and laboratori­es are undergroun­d,” the report said.

Despite this, Ms Indumathi said, she and other scientists conducted outreach programmes in Theni. “Some people were afraid about whether the mountain would fall down if we tunnelled through it, others were confused about atoms and neutrinos,” she said. “Some people even had very simple questions – ‘You’ll fence off the area, so our goats won’t be able to graze in the mountains’.”

Through town-hall meetings, pamphlets and informal interactio­ns, the scientists obtained the consent of most of the people who live in the area, she said. Some residents, however, continue to be mobilised by the Marumalarc­hi Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (MDMK), a state political party led by V Gopalsamy, who petitioned the Madras high court against the INO and said it posed a threat to groundwate­r, and could “affect the livelihood­s of five southern districts of the state”. But Ms Indumathi was confident the INO would not be a threat to the region. She also rejected the rumour that the INO would work with neutrinos beamed from Fermilab.

“Even if there was such a beam of neutrinos, which is not the case, you’d need to be exposed to it continuous­ly for 100 million years to even equal the sort of radioactiv­ity you’re exposed to in one normal year,” she said.

“A project that should be seen only on its own merits is being questioned along obscuranti­st, misleading, fear- mongering lines,” she said. “That is really a tragedy.”

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Sarkar / AFP ?? State politician V Gopalsamy has opposed the project.
Dibyangshu Sarkar / AFP State politician V Gopalsamy has opposed the project.

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