Expert explains work at facility linked to Nobel physics prize
Yoshinari Hayato, associate professor at the University of Tokyo's Institute for Cosmic Ray Research, explains work in the control room at Super-Kamiokande, the world's largest underground neutrino detector facility, in Hida, Gifu Prefecture, central Japan, on Oct. 9, 2015. The detector was instrumental in research by Japanese scientist Takaaki Kajita, who was named a co-recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physics on Oct. 6 "for the discovery of neutrino oscillations, which shows that neutrinos have mass." (Kyodo)
==Kyodo
- Product Code
- ILEA000048923
- Registered date
- 2015/10/15 15:12:31
- Credit
- Kyodo / Kyodo News Images
- Media size
- 3817 × 2806 pixel
- Deployment size
- 1.05(MB)*
*File size when opened in Photoshop, etc.