About a year after an accident stopped the world’s largest neutrino detector in its tracks, Super-Kamiokande in Japan is on schedule to start up again in January. The surviving photomultiplier tubes in the central detector have been redistributed and enclosed in individual protective casings to prevent a repeat of the chain reaction that popped some 7000 PMTs (see Physics Today, Physics Today 0031-9228 551200222 https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1457255 January 2002, page 22 ). The detector will run at about half its original density—which reduces its sensitivity to low-energy solar neutrinos—for a few years, until the made-to-order 50-cm detectors can be replaced. The $20 million for these repairs is expected to be covered by Japan’s Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology. The full restoration of the smaller, outward-facing PMTs that monitor the coaxial outer detector was paid for with about $2 million from the US Department of Energy....

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