[08-02-2016]
By LION/EA 
An ambitious plan to add a new angle to the hunt for dark matter has  passed an important landmark. A collaboration of particle physicists and  theorists, with a leading role for Leiden University’s Alexey Boyarsky,  has proposed an experiment to  try and create ‘sterile’ neutrinos with  the so-called Super Proton Synchrotron (SPS). This instrument is part of  the particle lab CERN in Geneva. The SPS council has now endorsed the  experiment, meaning that the proposal will go into a three year process  of testing. If the CERN council finally approves, the 185 million euro  Search for Hidden Particles (SHiP) Experiment will kick-off in 2026.
    Boyarsky is on a quest to unravel the nature of one of the most  mysterious phenomena in the Universe. The cosmos appears to consist for  the larger part out of mass we cannot see. We have no idea where it  comes from. Physicists call this ‘dark matter’. Sterile neutrinos are  candidate building blocks of dark matter. However, it has never been  proven that these hypothetical particles even exist at all.
   If they do exist, they would have an extremely weak or even no  interaction with ordinary matter. The proposed SHiP experiment uses  SPS’s high-intensity proton beam to try and produce heavy sterile  neutrinos, which should occasionally decay into normal matter. The  collaboration expects the protons to create the sought-after particles  through a chain of events, after which they would be able to indirectly  prove their existence by measuring signature decay signals.
     
   
Boyarsky reached an important landmark in his attempt to set up a 185 million euro experiment that uses this Super Proton Synchrotron at CERN to prove the existence of sterile neutrinos.