About the Collaboration

The Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment (DUNE), supported by the Long-Baseline Neutrino Facility (LBNF), is an international endeavor hosted by the U.S. Department of Energy’s Fermilab. DUNE brings together scientists and engineers around the world, all sharing the same goal: to understand the neutrino, one of the most elusive and mysterious subatomic particles in the universe.

The DUNE Collaboration is:

1500+ collaborators

228 institutions

38 countries and CERN

 

DUNE is led by two co-spokespersons:

Sowjanya Gollapini, Senior Scientist, Los Alamos National Lab

Dave Newbold, UK Research and Innovation

 

 

A structure of consortia, working groups, task forces, boards and committees have been established to advance work in each of the key areas of physics research, in development of the detectors and prototypes and for coordination of interfaces among these areas and between DUNE and LBNF. Leadership and membership of these groups reflect DUNE’s commitment to fully integrating participating institutions from around the world into the planning and execution of the collaboration’s activities and to provide roles for younger members.

Publications: https://atwork.dunescience.org/publications/

 

The DUNE Collaboration gathered at CERN in January 2026 for scientific and operational discussions and updates. The Collaboration gathers three times per year.