Muons unveiled new details about a void in Egypt’s Great Pyramid

The corridor’s purpose is still unclear

The Great Pyramid of Giza against partly cloudy skies

Using subatomic particles called muons, scientists probed a hidden cavern in the Great Pyramid of Giza (shown).

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A nebulous void in Egypt’s Great Pyramid of Giza has been unveiled thanks to strange subatomic particles called muons.

Scientists first identified the void in 2016 using muons, heavy relatives of electrons that can penetrate through solid materials. Thought to be a corridor-shaped hole, the void was located near a chevron-shaped structure visible on the pyramid’s north face.