WEBVTT

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So I'm a math student from Dominican University

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and I came to Chichén Itzá, Mexico

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with a team from Dominican University and other universities

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and worked with local archeologists to put a

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particle detector inside the El Castillo pyramid through

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some tunnels that archeologists dug out

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about a hundred years ago.

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And the point of this particle detector is

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to basically make an x-ray of the inside of the pyramid

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that they haven't been able to dig yet

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and potentially find new rooms

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or little cavities that we don't know about yet.

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I like to see our detector actually doing

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what it's supposed to do.

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You know, like we will do some testings, Dominican,

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you know, put it in a room

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and then leave them running for one hour, two hours

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and then changing something.

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But it was never like, you know, on site

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and just seeing the detector there inside the pyramid,

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being able to see in the computer when a muon hits earth

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detector and knowing that it works

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and we're gonna get pretty, pretty good data to play with.

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And in the future, uh, make the big detector

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and think that's my favorite part.

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We know that there is a substructure under the pyramid.

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The archeologists have known that since the 1930s,

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but you can't excavate

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because you can't damage the exterior pyramid.

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So what we can do is move our detector around

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and look at different directions to see what

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that substructure looks like.

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Is there maybe a second substructure?

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So a third structure hidden even

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further underneath the pyramid.

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Are there voids that they don't know about?

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Things like that. And the idea is pretty straightforward.

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It's almost like using an x-ray.

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You put the detector inside the pyramid,

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and when it's inside the pyramid,

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the cosmic race start at the top of the atmosphere, pass

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through the pyramid, hit the detector,

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and the thicker the rock, the fewer muons you see.

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So by looking in each direction, we can see from the number

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of muons how thick the rock is in each direction

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by knowing the exterior dimensions of the pyramid.

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Well, if I know that I expect 20 meters

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of rock in this one section

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and I see 15,

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that probably means there's five meters of empty space.

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This project was funded initially by a alumni grant

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through Dominican University to do some

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of the pre grant work.

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And then we got the National Science Foundation

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grant on our team.

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We have Dominican University, Chicago State University, Ina,

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which is our archeological colleagues here on site,

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University of Mexico.

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So it's a, a broad coalition of different

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scientists in different fields.

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My favorite part about this trip is, the fact

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that I can come here and see all the old architecture

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and history behind everything

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and use the science that I know

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and that I enjoy to help the archeologists

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and the people that have been working here

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and contribute in my own way to help them, you know,

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learn something or figure something out.
