Inside EgyptтАЩs Great Pyramid of Giza lies a mysterious cavity, its void unseen by any living human, its surface untouched by modern hands. But luckily, scientists are no longer limited by human senses.
To feel out the contours of the pyramidтАЩs unexplored interior, scientists followed the paths of tiny subatomic particles called muons. Those particles, born high in EarthтАЩs atmosphere, hurtled toward the surface and burrowed through the pyramid. Some of the particles imprinted hints of what they encountered on sensitive detectors in and around the pyramid. The particlesтАЩ paths revealed the surprising presence of the hidden chamber, announced in 2017 (SN: 11/25/17, p. 6).
That stunning discovery sparked plans among physicists to use muons to explore other archaeological structures. And some researchers are using the technique, called muography, to map out volcanoesтАЩ plumbing. тАЬYou can see inside the volcano, really,тАЭ says geophysicist Giovanni Leone of Universidad de Atacama in Copiap├│, Chile. That internal view could give scientists more information about how and when a volcano is likely to erupt.
Muons are everywhere on EarthтАЩs surface. TheyтАЩre produced when high-energy particles from space, known as cosmic rays, crash into EarthтАЩs atmosphere. Muons continuously shower down through the atmosphere at various angles. When they reach EarthтАЩs surface, the particles tickle the insides of large structures like pyramids. They penetrate smaller stuff too: Your thumbnail is pierced by a muon about once a minute. Measuring how many of the particles are absorbed as they pass through a structure can reveal the density of an object, and expose any hidden gaps within.
The technique is reminiscent of taking an enormous X-ray image, says Mariaelena DтАЩErrico, a particle physicist at the National Institute for Nuclear Physics in Naples, Italy, who studies Mount Vesuvius with muons. But тАЬinstead of X-rays, we use тАж a natural source of particles,тАЭ the EarthтАЩs very own, never-ending supply of muons.
Physicists have typically studied cosmic rays to better understand the universe from whence they came. But muography turns this tradition on its head, using these cosmic particles to learn more about previously unknowable parts of our world. For the most part, says particle physicist Hiroyuki Tanaka of the University of Tokyo, тАЬparticles arriving from the universe have not been applied to our regular lives.тАЭ Tanaka and others are trying to change that.
No particle like it
Awkward cousins of electrons, muons may seem like an unnecessary oddity of physics. When the particleтАЩs identity was first revealed, physicists wondered why the strange particle existed at all. While electrons play a crucial role in atoms, the heavier muons serve no such purpose.
But muons turn out to be ideal for making images of the interiors of large objects. A muonтАЩs mass is about 207 times as large as an electronтАЩs. That extra bulk means muons can traverse hundreds of meters of rock or more. The difference between an electron and a muon passing through matter is like the difference between a bullet and a cannonball, says particle physicist Cristina C├вrloganu. A wall may stop a bullet, while a cannonball passes through.
Muons are plentiful, so thereтАЩs no need to create artificial beams of radiation, as required for taking X-ray images of broken bones in the doctorтАЩs office, for example. Muons тАЬare for free,тАЭ says C├вrloganu, of CNRS and the National Institute of Nuclear and Particle Physics in Aubi├иre, France.
Another crucial upside of muons: тАЬTheyтАЩre also very easy to detect,тАЭ says nuclear physicist Richard Kouzes of the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in Richland, Wash. A simple detector made of strips of plastic and light sensors will do the trick. Other muon detectors require little more than a specialized version of photographic film. ThereтАЩs no other particle like it, Kouzes says.
Muons have a negative electric charge, like an electron. Their antiparticles, antimuons, which also shower down on Earth, have a positive charge. Muon detectors capture tracks of both negatively and positively charged varieties. When these particles pass through material, they lose energy in various ways, for example, by colliding with electrons and knocking them loose from their atoms.
With that energy loss, muons slow down, sometimes enough to stop. The denser the material, the fewer muons will make it through to a detector placed underneath or to the side of the material. So large, dense objects such as volcanoes or pyramids cast a muon shadow. And any gaps within those structures will appear as bright spots within that shadow, because more muons can slip through. Interpreting such dappled shadows can open a vista into hidden worlds.
Probing pyramids
Muography proved itself in a pyramid. One of the first uses of the technique was in the 1960s, when physicist Luis Alvarez and colleagues looked for hidden chambers in KhafreтАЩs pyramid in Giza, a slightly smaller neighbor of the Great Pyramid. Detectors found no hint of unexpected rooms, but proved that the technique worked.
Still, the idea took time to take off, because muon detectors of the era tended to be bulky and worked best in well-controlled laboratory conditions. To spot the muons, AlvarezтАЩs team used detectors called spark chambers. Spark chambers are filled with gas and metal plates under high voltage, so that charged particles passing through create trails of sparks.
Now, thanks to advances in particle physics technologies, spark chambers have largely been replaced. тАЬWe can make very compact, very sturdy detectors,тАЭ says nuclear physicist Edmundo Garcia-Solis of Chicago State University. Those detectors can be designed to work outside a carefully controlled lab.
One type of resilient detector is built with plastic containing a chemical called scintillator, which releases light when a muon or other charged particle passes through (SN Online: 8/5/21). The light is then captured and measured by electronics. Later this year, physicists will use these detectors to take another look at KhafreтАЩs pyramid, Kouzes and colleagues reported February 23 in the Journal for Advanced Instrumentation in Science. Compact enough to fit within two large carrying cases, the detector тАЬcan be carried into the pyramid and then operated with a laptop and thatтАЩs all,тАЭ Kouzes says.
A different but particularly low-maintenance type of detector, called a nuclear emulsion film, was crucial to uncovering the Great PyramidтАЩs hidden void in 2017. Nuclear emulsions record particle tracks in a special type of photographic film. The detectors are left in place for a period of time, then brought back to a lab for analysis of the tracks imprinted in them.
Particle physicist Kunihiro Morishima of Nagoya University in Japan helped discover the secret chamber through work on an international project called ScanPyramids. тАЬNuclear emulsions are lightweight, compact and do not require a power supply,тАЭ he explains. That meant that multiple detectors could be placed in prime viewing locations in one of the pyramidтАЩs rooms, the QueenтАЩs Chamber, and a small niche next to it. The detectorsтАЩ measurements were supplemented with plastic scintillator detectors inside the QueenтАЩs Chamber, and gas-based detectors outside the pyramid.
Since the discovery of the void, Morishima and colleagues have been taking additional measurements to better sketch out its properties. The team placed emulsion detectors in 20 locations in the pyramid, as well as gas detectors in several different spots. Using their new array of instruments, the researchers determined that the void is over 40 meters long. Its purpose is still unknown.
A more extensive survey of the Great Pyramid, placing much larger detectors outside the pyramid, is being planned by another team of researchers. The detectors will be periodically moved to measure muons from multiple angles, the team reported March 6 in the Journal for Advanced Instrumentation in Science. The result, says co┬нauthor and particle physicist Alan Bross of Fermilab in Batavia, Ill., will offer a 3-D view of whatтАЩs inside (SN: 12/18/21 & 1/1/22, p. 44).
Pyramids in other parts of the world are also getting closer scrutiny. Garcia-Solis and colleagues are now planning muography of the Maya pyramid known as El Castillo at Chich├йn Itz├б in Mexico. Morishima and colleagues, as well, are planning work on Maya pyramids.
Scientists hope such studies might reveal new chambers, or features not visible with other techniques for peering inside of objects. Ultrasound, ground-penetrating radar or X-rays, for example, can only penetrate a short distance from the surface, Bross explains. Muons, on the other hand, give an in-depth picture. For studying pyramids, Bross says, тАЬmuons really are ideal.тАЭ
Peering inside a volcano
Vesuvius is a known menace in Naples and the surrounding municipalities that snuggle up against the volcanoтАЩs flanks. Infamous for destroying the ancient city of Pompeii in A.D. 79, the volcano has been quiescent since 1944, when a major eruption destroyed several nearby villages (SN: 2/29/20, p. 5). But if it erupted, it would endanger the lives of roughly 600,000 people who live closest to it, and many others in the vicinity.
тАЬVesuvius always scared me,тАЭ DтАЩErrico says. тАЬI was born and I live under this volcano.тАЭ Now, as part of the Muon Radiography of Vesuvius experiment, or MURAVES, she seeks to better understand the volcano and its dangers.
Using muon detectors 1.5 kilometers from the volcanoтАЩs crater, the team is mapping out muon densities тАФ and thus rock densities тАФ at the top of VesuviusтАЩ cone. In a paper posted February 24 at arXiv.org, the researchers presented preliminary hints of density differences between the volcanoтАЩs northwestern and southeastern halves. MURAVES is still collecting data; future observations should help scientists understand finer details of the volcanoтАЩs internal structure, which is thought to be layered due to repeated eruptions.
Information about a volcanoтАЩs structure can help scientists predict what hazards to expect in an eventual eruption, such as where landslides might occur. And that could help scientists know what steps to take to reduce risks to people living nearby, says C├вrloganu, who studied the dormant volcano Puy de D├┤me near Clermont-Ferrand, France, with muography and is now working to image the aptly named island of Vulcano in Italy.
When Mount St. Helens in Washington erupted in 1980, for example, an entire flank of the volcano collapsed. The disaster killed 57 people and caused widespread damage. Knowing where a volcanoтАЩs structural weaknesses lie could help scientists better predict how an eruption might play out, and what areas sit inside the danger zone, C├вrloganu says.
C├вrloganu thinks muons will be useful for pointing out structural weaknesses, but not for giving a warning when the volcano is going to blow. Other researchers are more optimistic about muonsтАЩ capability for giving timely forewarnings.
Muography is ripe for inclusion in volcano early-warning systems, Leone, Tanaka and colleagues wrote last November in Proceedings of the Royal Society A. But more work needs to be done to integrate muography with other established methods that help warn of an upcoming eruption, Leone says. These methods include seismic measurements, as well as observations of ground deformation and volcanic gas emissions.
Tanaka and colleagues are studying Sakurajima, one of the most active volcanoes in the world, near Kagoshima, Japan. One of the volcanoтАЩs craters, the Showa crater, erupted frequently until 2017 when the activity abruptly shifted to another crater, Minamidake. Comparing muography data taken before and after this shift revealed that a new, dense region had formed below the Showa crater, Tanaka and colleagues reported in 2019 in Geophysical Research Letters. That hints at the reason ShowaтАЩs eruptions stopped: It was clogged with a dense plug of solidified magma, Tanaka says.
These results suggest that scientists can use muography to help predict volcanic eruptions, Tanaka says. In fact, using deep learning techniques on the muography data from Sakurajima, Tanaka and colleagues reported in Scientific Reports in 2020 that they were able to predict whether the volcano would erupt the next day, by analyzing the previous weekтАЩs data. The technique correctly predicted eruption days of the volcano more than 72 percent of the time, and correctly predicted non-eruption days more than 85 percent of the time.
Just as the discovery of X-rays unveiled a whole new way of seeing the world, harnessing muons could change our perspective on our surroundings. Attitudes toward a particle once thought to be unnecessary тАФ unwanted and unloved by physicists тАФ have been transformed. One day, perhaps, muons could save lives.