Fermilab feature

Mark Ross‑Lonergan elected co-spokesperson for MicroBooNE collaboration

Mark Ross-Lonergan, an assistant professor at Columbia University, has been elected co-spokesperson for MicroBooNE — a major neutrino experiment at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory and an essential part of the lab’s neutrino research program.

Joining current MicroBooNE co-spokesperson Justin Evans of the University of Manchester, Ross-Lonergan takes over for Matt Toups, who recently completed his term. Spokespeople for large scientific collaborations help set research priorities, keep experiments running smoothly and represent the teams to the outside world. MicroBooNE brings together approximately 190 scientists from 40 institutions worldwide.

Mark Ross-Lonergan is the newest co-spokesperson for the MicroBooNE collaboration. Credit: Ryan Postel, Fermilab
Mark Ross-Lonergan is the newest co-spokesperson for the MicroBooNE collaboration. Credit: Ryan Postel, Fermilab

“Getting to work even more closely with all the amazing students, postdocs and colleagues that make up MicroBooNE is incredibly exciting,” said Ross-Lonergan. “This experiment helped build me into the physicist, and the person, I am today, and I’m really happy to have the chance to give back to the collaboration as we enter the next chapter.”

The MicroBooNE detector was designed to study neutrinos — tiny, nearly massless particles that pass through ordinary matter almost undetected. To track them, MicroBooNE used 170 tons of liquid argon chilled to nearly minus 300 degrees Fahrenheit. When a neutrino happened to collide with an argon atom in the detector, it produced a burst of charged particles. Those particles left trails in the liquid argon that the detector could record in fine detail.

This technology, known as a liquid-argon time projection chamber, allows scientists to identify exactly what kind of particle is being detected and where it came from — like watching the wake left by a boat on calm water and identifying the type of boat that created the wake.

“This experiment helped build me into the physicist, and the person, I am today, and I’m really happy to have the chance to give back to the collaboration as we enter the next chapter.”

Mark Ross-Lonergan, MicroBooNE co-spokesperson

Since beginning data collection in October 2015 as part of the Short-Baseline Neutrino Program at Fermilab, MicroBooNE was the first large-scale detector of its kind to compile an extensive record of neutrino interactions on a neutrino beamline, advancing scientists’ understanding of how the liquid-argon technology performs at scale.

One of MicroBooNE’s central goals is to follow up on a puzzling result from an earlier experiment called MiniBooNE. That experiment, also hosted at Fermilab, detected more particle interactions than expected — a statistical excess significant enough that it suggested the potential existence of new physics.  However, scientists were unable to determine whether the extra signal came from electrons or from single photons. That distinction matters because each would point to a completely different explanation.

The MicroBooNE detector was built specifically to distinguish between these two possibilities. A recent study published in the journal Nature found that electrons are likely not the source. But ruling out photons is more challenging, and the question remains open.

While the MicroBooNE detector is no longer operating, scientists are now analyzing the extensive data that was collected. Ross-Lonergan notes the collaboration’s next major result — which utilizes nearly twice as much data and improved analysis methods — should provide a much clearer answer.

“MicroBooNE has achieved a lot over the past 10 years and produced some remarkable results, but we are by no means done.”

Mark Ross-Lonergan, MicroBooNE co-spokesperson

MicroBooNE also served as a proving ground for the Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment, a much larger future project that will use liquid-argon detectors weighing thousands of tons. Lessons learned from MicroBooNE and the broader Short-Baseline Neutrino Program at Fermilab — including advances in computing algorithms, detector hardware and machine learning techniques — are feeding into DUNE’s design.

Ross-Lonergan is optimistic about what’s ahead in MicroBooNE’s search for undiscovered particles that could link neutrinos to dark matter.

“MicroBooNE has achieved a lot over the past 10 years and produced some remarkable results, but we are by no means done,” he said. “I genuinely believe the next 10 years will prove to be every bit as fruitful and exciting as the last.”

Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory is America’s national laboratory for particle physics and accelerator research. Fermi Forward Discovery Group manages Fermilab for the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science. Visit Fermilab’s website at www.fnal.gov and follow us on social media.

Olivia Seidel is tackling a problem that sounds deceptively simple: understanding how transistors behave when they get very cold. The answers she finds could shape everything from quantum computers to satellites in outer space, and she is using artificial intelligence to accelerate that research.

A Ph.D. student working within Fermi National Acceleratory Laboratory’s Microelectronics group, Seidel is leveraging AI for cryogenic transistor modeling. Her work draws on Fermilab’s deep expertise in microelectronics and cryogenic devices to support key goals of the Genesis Mission — a sweeping national AI initiative combining the expertise of the Department of Energy’s national laboratories, U.S. research universities and industry to supercharge American innovation.

I recently visited Seidel at her office in Fermilab’s iconic Wilson Hall to talk about the exciting work underway.

Olivia Seidel using AI to study how transistors behave in extreme cold. Credit: JJ Starr, Fermilab
Olivia Seidel using AI to study how transistors behave in extreme cold. Credit: JJ Starr, Fermilab

Q: What exactly is a transistor, and why should anyone care about how it behaves in the cold?

Transistors are the computational building blocks of every electronic device you use — your phone, your laptop, anything that manipulates bits and bytes. Over decades, industry has become extraordinarily good at making them smaller and more powerful. We’re talking about transistors just a few nanometers across — so small that a single wavelength of visible light is hundreds of times wider.

For most of that history, room temperature was the only environment that mattered. But quantum computing and other emerging technologies require electronics that function at cryogenic temperatures — just a few degrees above absolute zero. And at those extremes, transistors behave very differently.

Q: How do the transistors behave differently?

One of the clearest examples is what it takes to switch a transistor on. At room temperature, you apply a certain voltage, and it turns on. At deep cryogenic temperatures below 4 kelvin [about minus 452 degrees Fahrenheit], like the temperatures of outer space, it takes significantly higher voltage to flip that switch. The whole curve of the transistor’s behavior shifts.

That might sound like a minor technical detail, but if you’re a circuit designer unaware of that shift, your entire circuit can fail. It could also technically work while consuming far more power than it should — and in a cryogenic environment, excess power means excess heat, which can be catastrophic. Heat causes decoherence in quantum systems, essentially causing quantum properties to fall apart, and can disrupt electronics trying to detect neutrinos in a cryogenic liquid-argon environment.

Q: Do you build the models that predict this behavior?

I do! I build physics models that accurately describe how transistors behave at cryogenic temperatures, and we measure transistors in the lab at those temperatures to inform and validate the models. The goal is that when a circuit designer sits down to build something that needs to operate at 4 kelvin, they can trust the model — rather than building the whole thing, putting it in a cryogenic system and finding out it doesn’t work.

Q: What are some of the real-world applications that would benefit from this knowledge?

There are several. One big area is trapped ion quantum computing. Ions — charged atoms — can serve as qubits, and to manipulate them precisely, you use high-voltage transistors in an extremely cold environment. The cold suppresses thermal noise, helping preserve the fragile quantum state of the qubit.

Another application is superconducting nanowire single-photon detectors, or SNSPDs — thin superconducting films that detect single particles of light. These are used for particle detection and precision measurements and also require electronics that function at deep cryogenic temperatures.

There’s also interest in using cryogenic transistors for the readout and control of superconducting qubits — having electronics that live inside the cryogenic system itself rather than sending signals back up to room temperature. Along with quantum applications, there are particle physics uses at Fermilab, like the large liquid-argon detectors in the DUNE at LBNF neutrino experiment, and interest from deep space satellite designers where the background temperature of the universe sits around 3 kelvin [about minus 454 degrees Fahrenheit].

Q: That’s a wide range of applications. How long does it currently take to build these models?

That’s the problem. Using standard industry tools, building a robust set of cryogenic physics models for one type of transistor can take around two years. Technology advances faster than the models do — and that’s an industry-wide challenge.

Q: Is this where AI and machine learning can come in?

Through the Genesis Mission, DOE is harnessing capabilities at the national laboratories by using AI to make laborious, data-rich research processes dramatically faster. Our work on cryogenic transistor modeling is a direct example.

The idea is to use machine learning to speed up the modeling process enormously. Instead of painstakingly fitting physical parameters using other tools, we let the AI/ML model directly predict the model from the measurement data we collect in the lab.

As a proof of concept, I built a prototype that replaces one step in the traditional modeling process with a machine learning approach, yielding results just as good, if not better, than the conventional method.

The key metric is the time required to go from an undefined set of physics-model parameters to a complete, working parameter set tailored to a given transistor and capable of accurately predicting its deep-cryogenic behavior.

“We’re laying the groundwork so that future researchers don’t have to spend years on something a well-trained model can do in a fraction of the time.”

Olivia Seidel

Using the new machine learning approach, I spent roughly two weeks generating training data and building the model. Once trained, it predicts optimal physics parameters from deep cryogenic transistor measurement data in approximately 120 milliseconds. The conventional approach, by contrast, can take anywhere from weeks to months, depending on the transistor.

That prototype is a core aspect of the Accelerating eXtreme Environment Specs-to-Silicon project led by Fermilab — a Genesis Mission initiative advancing microelectronics in extreme environments where industry expertise and investment remain scarce. We’re using my work to build a complete deep cryogenic model for transistors highly sought after for quantum information science and high energy physics applications at 4 kelvin. The goal is a full, production-quality model built from the ground up using AI — not just adapting a room-temperature model and hoping it holds at cryogenic temperatures.

Q: What does “from the ground up” mean in this context?

Currently, the standard approach is to take a room-temperature transistor model and adapt it to cryogenic temperatures, re-extracting all the physics parameters to fit what you actually measure. It works, but it’s slow and laborious.

The longer-term vision is to build models starting from the material properties of the transistor itself — not from a room-temperature approximation. The machine learning model would infer the underlying physics directly from lab measurements, rather than adjusting a pre-existing framework. It’s a fundamentally different and more powerful approach.

Q: What do you think about the significance of this work within the broader picture?

Cryogenic transistor modeling was something that wasn’t at the forefront of our thinking about twenty years ago. Now it’s increasingly critical infrastructure for quantum computing, particle physics and space technology — and the demand is only going to grow.

What we’re doing with machine learning is similar to how Fermilab once automated wire bonding — a precise, painstaking manual process of connecting tiny wires to chips by hand. Eventually machines took over, freeing skilled people to focus on harder problems. We’re laying the groundwork so that future researchers don’t have to spend years on something a well-trained model can do in a fraction of the time. It’s not replacing the science — it’s making the science move faster.

Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory is America’s national laboratory for particle physics and accelerator research. Fermi Forward Discovery Group manages Fermilab for the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science. Visit Fermilab’s website at www.fnal.gov and follow us on social media.

Physicists discovered decades ago that odd little particles called neutrinos, of which there are three known “flavors,” morph between these flavors as they travel, and they call this phenomenon neutrino oscillation. The Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment, developed by an international collaboration and hosted by Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, aims to answer fundamental questions about the early evolution of the universe through its study of these oscillations. This requires a neutrino beam and the ability to sample the neutrinos right out of the gate in their original state and again after they change.

To capture the data, DUNE is building both a near detector and a far detector in the path of the most intense neutrino beam ever created. The hybrid near detector, located only about 2,000 feet downstream from the neutrino source at Fermilab in Batavia, Illinois, will get the first taste. But most of the neutrinos will travel 800 miles on to the far detector at the Sanford Underground Research Facility in Lead, South Dakota, where only a small proportion will interact with the detector because the beam will spread out over that distance and neutrinos are famously elusive. The rest will harmlessly sail on, largely unimpeded, through the Earth’s crust and beyond.

Since the DUNE far detector will use liquid-argon time projection chamber technology to measure neutrinos, it is critical that the same technology be used for the near detector to facilitate a comparison of data on the same target — liquid argon. This part of DUNE’s near detector is called ND-LAr, short for “near detector liquid argon.”

“Despite being only 1% the size of one far detector module, this ND-LAr detector is still large enough to fully contain the signals from neutrinos.”

Michele Weber, the University of Bern

As part of DUNE’s plan to measure neutrinos over a wide range of energies, the ND-LAr, along with an accompanying muon spectrometer, will be able to move sideways off axis to better characterize the beam. A stationary beam monitor will remain on axis to watch for any beam variations that could affect measurements.

“Despite being only 1% the size of one far detector module, this ND-LAr detector is still large enough to fully contain the signals from neutrinos,” said Michele Weber from the University of Bern who is also the leader of the ND-LAr consortium. “This enables a precise comparison with what is seen at the far detector, thereby revealing the neutrino oscillation that occurs between the two sites.”

This graphic shows the engineering design model of the underground DUNE near detector hall. The neutrino beam enters from the right. The liquid-argon time projection chamber (labeled ND-LAr) is the first to encounter the neutrino beam. Directly behind it sits the muon spectrometer, shown in blue and green. Both can move off the beam axis (toward the upper right) to sample different neutrino energies. The third component, the beam monitor at the farthest end of the hall, depicted in yellow and blue, stays in place on axis in the beam. Credit: DUNE Collaboration
This graphic shows the engineering design model of the underground DUNE near detector hall. The neutrino beam enters from the right. The liquid-argon time projection chamber, labeled ND-LAr, is the first to encounter the neutrino beam. Directly behind it sits the muon spectrometer, shown in blue and green. Both can move off the beam axis, toward the upper right, to sample different neutrino energies. The third component, the beam monitor at the farthest end of the hall, depicted in yellow and blue, stays in place, on axis in the beam. Credit: DUNE Collaboration

Given that the neutrino beam broadens with distance, more like the light from a flashlight than a laser beam, the near detector will see a much more concentrated flux of neutrinos than will the far detector — one of the reasons the near detector does not have to be so large. This concentration of neutrinos leads to a phenomenon called “pileup” in the detector, where the rate of neutrino interactions overwhelms the rate at which the detector can record the charge signals that emanate from them. The ND-LAr design cleverly mitigates this problem by segmenting its volume into mini detectors, called modules, with individual pixelated readout. The numerous interactions occur in different modules, without overwhelming any of them.

An engineering design model of the near detector’s liquid-argon time-projection chamber. The detector includes seven rows each of five LArTPC modules housed inside a single cryostat. Credit: DUNE Collaboration
An engineering design model of the near detector’s liquid-argon time-projection chamber. The detector includes seven rows, each with five LArTPC modules housed inside a single cryostat. Credit: DUNE Collaboration

ND‑LAr uses the novel liquid-argon pixel system, or LArPix, that was invented by physicists and engineers at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. This end‑to‑end pixelated sensor and electronics system can image neutrino events in true 3D, which is an important aspect to resolving individual neutrino interactions in the detector.

Brooke Russell, a researcher with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, is testing reconstruction efforts for this type of pileup mitigation. By anticipating pileup from the neutrino beam, the team hopes to paint as accurate a picture as possible and not be overwhelmed by the rate of neutrino interactions.

“ND-LAr is unique in that we purposely partition neutrino signals across multiple optically segmented volumes and algorithmically stitch these signals back together,” Russell said.

Through these segmentation and reconstruction efforts, DUNE will provide consistent clarity of the recorded neutrino interactions.

Even with the segmentation, interactions that occur very close to one another in space may be misinterpreted as a single event unless light signals are also collected to separate them in time, according to Zoya Vallari of the Ohio State University, an analysis coordinator for the ND-LAr. The instantaneous signals that scintillation light produces in the liquid argon make it possible to distinguish the potentially overlapping charge signals.

“The prototyping program for the DUNE liquid-argon near detector has been wildly successful, advancing multiple novel detector technologies and algorithms for data analysis.”

Dan Dwyer, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

The DUNE ND-LAr team has been developing and prototyping the segmented liquid-argon time projection chamber design, primarily at the University of Bern, in Switzerland, starting in 2016 with a program called ArgonCube to test the component technologies. In 2022 the steadily growing team constructed and tested a demonstrator of four half-size time-projection chamber modules, called 2×2. After collecting data from a neutrino beam source, this detector is now in a non-beam data collection phase at Fermilab, recording events from cosmic rays and other sources, such as calibration data. The effort currently involves more than 100 scientists from roughly 40 institutions.

“The 2×2 program has been pivotal in shaping our software, simulation and analysis frameworks,” said Vallari. “The data we collected is driving progress in calibration, event reconstruction and charge-light matching.”

“The experience gained with 2×2 has enabled us to thoroughly validate the detector concept in a realistic environment,” added Livio Calivers, a freshly minted Ph.D. from Bern. “As a young researcher, it gave me the opportunity to build an experiment from scratch and ultimately analyze real data from neutrino interactions.”

The team built and tested a single full-scale module in 2024 that incorporated improvements guided by insights from the 2×2 effort. A full row of five modules is currently in the works to test production, assembly and integration procedures, aiming for production to start at Fermilab in 2026.

Researchers extract the full-scale demonstrator, an instrumented liquid-argon test module for the DUNE ND-LAr, out of the test cryostat at Bern following its successful data-taking. Credit: Dres Hubacher, University of Bern
Researchers extract the full-scale demonstrator, an instrumented liquid-argon test module for the DUNE ND-LAr, out of a test cryostat at Bern following successful data-taking. Credit: Dres Hubacher, University of Bern

“The prototyping program for the DUNE liquid-argon near detector has been wildly successful, advancing multiple novel detector technologies and algorithms for data analysis,” said Dan Dwyer of Berkeley Lab who is also the technical lead for ND-LAr. “These results give us confidence that we can cope with the very high intensity of the DUNE neutrino beam and achieve DUNE’s ambitious scientific goals.”

Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory is America’s national laboratory for particle physics and accelerator research. Fermi Forward Discovery Group manages Fermilab for the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science. Visit Fermilab’s website at www.fnal.gov and follow us on social media.

A collaborative research team comprised of U.S. Department of Energy national laboratories and led by Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory aims to revolutionize custom microelectronics design by using artificial intelligence to accelerate development of chips that can function in extreme environments.

The Accelerating eXtreme Environment Specs-to-Silicon — or AXESS — project will boost innovation and national competitiveness, enabling breakthroughs in quantum computing, fusion energy and particle physics.

Fermilab engineer Yash Saxena holds a custom circuit board designed to measure chip performance in cryogenic environments. Credit: JJ Starr, Fermilab
Fermilab engineer Yash Saxena holds a custom circuit board designed to measure chip performance in cryogenic environments. Credit: JJ Starr, Fermilab

AXESS is a collaborative endeavor leveraging the strengths of the vast DOE lab complex — including Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory and Sandia National Laboratories — as well as university collaborators and leading industry partners such as Siemens.

The team is developing proofs of concept for DOE’s Genesis Mission — a national mission to accelerate science through AI.

Fermilab, America’s particle physics and accelerator laboratory, is well-suited to lead this type of work and extend the adoption of rapid chip design to other research areas.

All of this coming together within the Genesis Mission is a great opportunity for Fermilab to team up with others and use AI to significantly accelerate chip design.” 

Nhan Tran, head of Fermilab’s AI Program

“Particle detectors must function in some of the most extreme environments in terms of radiation, cryogenic temperatures and speed,” said Nhan Tran, head of Fermilab’s AI Program. “As a result, we’ve built our own custom detectors for many years, and Fermilab has established deep expertise in microelectronics for extreme environments. More recently, we’ve developed tools and methods used across the community to integrate AI onto chips. All of this coming together within the Genesis Mission is a great opportunity for Fermilab to team up with others and use AI to significantly accelerate chip design.” 

Custom-designing specialized chips that are critical to scientific research is a highly iterative, time-intensive process that can take many months — even years — to complete.

Through this proposed Genesis Mission project, the research team is building a framework that uses AI to speed up the chip-design process, dramatically reducing the time from chip specification to fabrication from months to weeks.

“The goal of this framework is to create systems in AI that help designers make the right decisions at each step of the design process, providing feedback for the next set of designers along the pipeline,” said Giuseppe Di Guglielmo, a principal engineer at Fermilab who is co-leading the project.

Traditionally, chips are designed independently in stages, each by a different set of experts. From materials used, transistor and circuit designs, chip architecture, and finally, algorithms that run on the chips, a decision made in one stage might create issues in subsequent stages. Furthermore, the tools used are typically slow and manually operated.

Custom circuit board designed to measure chip performance in cryogenic environments. Credit: JJ Starr, Fermilab
This custom circuit board is designed to measure chip performance in cryogenic environments. Credit: JJ Starr, Fermilab

In contrast, researchers on this project are using AI to integrate all stages, ensuring any decision made in one stage optimizes the entire design and opens up traditional bottlenecks. They use one type of AI — large language models — to coordinate and automate manual steps and make high-level decisions, while another type — smaller surrogate models — act as stand-ins for the more complex and time-consuming models.

These surrogate AI models rapidly make predictions, such as how fast the chip will operate, the amount of power it will consume, the performance of the transistors, and so on, through the various stages. Within minutes, they evaluate millions of design options, predict the performance of each and isolate the most promising candidates before sending them through the full design process.

The initial proof of concept is focused on chips used to control quantum sensors, devices and systems. The team has achieved an approximately 500-times speedup for the design phase of the qubit readout algorithm and its implementation as firmware for field-programmable gate arrays. In addition, they have also developed more accurate transistor modeling at 4 kelvin — about minus 450 degrees Fahrenheit — important for operation in quantum environments. Another important area they are studying is radiation-hardened chips for use in high-energy particle physics experiments.

Under the auspices of the Genesis Mission, the researchers hope to expand this effort into a multi-year project.

By uniting Siemens’ proven technologies with the breakthrough science at Fermilab and across the DOE labs, we’re accelerating a new class of chips for quantum, fusion and high-radiation environments — at a speed and scale the nation has never had.”

David Burnette, engineering director at Siemens

“Siemens is putting industrial-grade hardware design solutions behind the Genesis Mission,” said David Burnette, engineering director for Catapult High-Level Synthesis, Siemens Digital Industries Software. “By uniting Siemens’ proven technologies with the breakthrough science at Fermilab and across the DOE labs, we’re accelerating a new class of chips for quantum, fusion and high-radiation environments — at a speed and scale the nation has never had.”

“We are really excited to be able to partner with other DOE labs and industries that have strong and complementary capabilities, bringing all these experts together across microelectronics and AI to make a big push forward for national success,” said Tran.

Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory is America’s national laboratory for particle physics and accelerator research. Fermi Forward Discovery Group manages Fermilab for the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science. Visit Fermilab’s website at www.fnal.gov and follow us on social media