SNOLAB


SNOLAB is a Canadian underground science laboratory specializing in neutrino and dark matter phyiscs. Located 2 km below the surface in Vale's Creighton nickel mine near Sudbury, Ontario, SNOLAB is an expansion of the existing facilities constructed for the original Sudbury Neutrino Observatory solar neutrino experiment.
SNOLAB is the world's deepest operational clean room facility. Although accessed through an active mine, the laboratory proper is maintained as a class-2000 cleanroom, with very low levels of dust and background radiation. SNOLAB's 2070 m of overburden rock provides 6010 metre water equivalent shielding from cosmic rays, providing a low-background environment for experiments requiring high sensitivities and extremely low counting The combination of great depth and cleanliness that SNOLAB affords allows extremely rare interactions and weak processes to be studied. In addition to neutrino and dark matter physics, SNOLAB is also host to biological experiments in an underground environment.

History

The Sudbury Neutrino Observatory was the world's deepest underground experiment since the Kolar Gold Fields experiments ended with the closing of that mine in 1992. With the deepest underground laboratory in North America at 2100 metre water equivalent depth, and the deepest in the world at 4800 MWE, many other groups were interested in conducting experiments in the 6000 MWE location.
In 2002, funding was approved by the Canada Foundation for Innovation to expand the SNO facilities into a general-purpose laboratory, and more funding was received in 2007 and 2008.
Construction of the major laboratory space was completed in 2009, with the entire lab entering operation as a 'clean' space in March 2011.
SNOLAB was briefly the world's deepest underground laboratory, until it was surpassed by the 2.4 km-deep China Jinping Underground Laboratory at the end of 2010. CJPL achieves a muon flux of less than 0.2 μ/m²/day, slightly less than SNOLAB's 0.27 μ/m²/day.

Experiments

, SNOLAB hosts the following experiments:

Neutrino detectors

Additional planned experiments have requested laboratory space such as the next-generation nEXO, and the COBRA Experiment searches for neutrinoless double beta decay. There are also plans for a larger PICO-500L detector.
The total size of the SNOLAB underground facilities, including utility spaces and personnel spaces, is:
ExcavatedClean roomLaboratory
Floor space7,215 m²
77,636 ft²
4,942 m²
53,180 ft²
3,055 m²
32,877 ft²
Volume46,648 m³
1,647,134 ft³
37,241 m³
1,314,973 ft³
29,555 m³
1,043,579 ft³