If your microwave suddenly whizzes out your house and down the road, you'll know India's successfully built the world's largest magnet. The 50,000 tons of magnetised iron will be housed underground, making CERN's 37,500-ton magnet shrink in shame.
Why does India need such a large magnet? It's for their neutrino observatory, which must be built underground so cosmic rays and other radiation don't interfere with the 30,000 detectors located there.
This particular observatory, dubbed INO (Indian Neutrino Observatory) will see neutrinos interacting with the iron to eject charged particles, that will be recorded by the various detectors and provide insight into the astronomy world. Only two sources have been located so far by other observatories (the sun and supernova SN1987A) but the INO is hopeful it will find others—otherwise they wouldn't have coughed up a budget of $250 million for the project.
They should build another big magnet and make a giant subwoofer... lol
ReplyDeleteNice, would like to see what it's capable of when it's finished!
ReplyDeleteCool Story Bro!;)
ReplyDeletehmm, smells like autobots.
ReplyDeletehmm, smells like autobots.
ReplyDeleteWoah, this is frikken interesting! I love science and big things!
ReplyDeletelol, I hope India knows how to use magnets.
ReplyDeleteI can't even understand what kind of power a magnet of that size has.
ReplyDeleteWow that's quite impressive!!
ReplyDeletei didn't know this
ReplyDeletethanks
That would erase a LOT of VHS tapes!
ReplyDeletei bet that thing is the reason for 2012 catastrophies
ReplyDeleteHow exactly do these things work anyway?
ReplyDeleteim gonna rub all your nails and screws against it so they stick to your tools!!!
ReplyDelete*evil laugh*
*muhahahahahah*
Damn, I wonder how many workers will get their metal things stuck to the magnet :D
ReplyDeleteDang those cosmic rays. I say they say to hell with the magnet and breed a bunch of mutant X-men of india.
ReplyDeleteThat thing will probably cause cancer in some lol
ReplyDeleteThat is def a MASSIVE magnet
ReplyDeleteI hope nothing goes wrong with it.
ReplyDeleteyes but how does it worK?
ReplyDeletei've heard about these!!
ReplyDeletehove this will revil how they works
ReplyDeleteHow do they work?
ReplyDeleteI wonder how can they keep the underground computers protected...
ReplyDeletei'm not surprise here. india has an awesome physics program and they have great research facilities.
ReplyDeleteinteresting
ReplyDeleteHaha at roxxor, a giant subwoofer would be cool.
ReplyDeleteimagine the power.
but then you'd need a huge amp to go along with it.
How far will this magnet's field be?
I noticed your new blog layout... really cool
ReplyDeletevery nice!
ReplyDeletephysics = win. but i am afraid of the magnet =(
ReplyDeletefuking miracles , and btw wtf does india care about the universe >.>? wtf, anyways they got a bunch of money so w/e >.>
ReplyDeletelol, funny!
ReplyDeleteMagnets are awesome!
ReplyDeleteOh man, this is awesome. I can't wait to see where this leads. I keep thinking of the picture "Magnets, how do they work?" Still awesome though.
ReplyDeleteIs anyone else having problem trying to comment on this blog? I have to open comments in a new tab to reply since simply clicking comment only brings up some sound ad or w/e.
ReplyDeleteI wonder what the power will be
ReplyDeletebring your hard drives with the bad stuff on them to get erased!
ReplyDeletewow, awesome
ReplyDelete