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Carefully submerging the delicate detector into its final home
-- a water-filled vat that's 20 feet tall and 25 feet in diameter
-- took more than two months, Mock said. Scientists are currently working to finish the plumbing needed to keep the xenon as clean as possible. The xenon, in both liquid and gas form, will fill the detector and be continuously circulated through a purifier that works much like a dialysis machine, pulling the substance out to remove impurities before pushing it back into the detector. Keeping the water and xenon pristine will help remove what Nelson called "fake sources"
-- or stuff that scientists have seen before, such as radiation, that could serve as false alarms in their efforts to detect dark matter. Nelson likens the experiment to Sherlock Holmes' approach to discovering the unknown by eliminating the known. Once the data start to flow, it'll take a month or two before the detector is sensitive enough to claim the "most-sensitive" title, Nelson said. After that, the scientists involved hope to start seeing what they covet most: something they've never seen before.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated
Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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