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From 1960 to 1962, Lederman, together with his fellow Columbia University
researchers Schwartz and Steinberger, collaborated in an important experiment
at the Brookhaven National Laboratory on Long Island, N.Y. There they
used a particle accelerator to produce the first laboratory-made beam
of neutrinos --elusive subatomic particles that have no detectable mass
and no electric charge and that travel at the speed of light. It was
already known that when neutrinos interact with matter, either electrons
or electron-like particles known as muons (mu mesons) are created. It
was not known, however, whether this indicated the existence of two
distinct types of neutrinos. The three scientists' work at Brookhaven
established that the neutrinos that produced muons were indeed a distinct
(and previously unknown) type of neutrino, one which the scientists
named muon neutrinos. The discovery of muon neutrinos subsequently led
to the recognition of a number of different "families" of
subatomic particles, and this eventually resulted in the standard model,
a scheme that has been used to classify all known elementary particles.
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