Synopsis

Energetic Neutrinos on Ice

Physics 6, s93
The IceCube detector at the South Pole has observed two of the highest energy neutrinos ever recorded.
M. G. Aartsen et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. (2013)

Neutrinos can travel huge distances through obstacles (like interstellar gases) that would stop other particles in their tracks. They are hard to catch, but also potentially good signals of what is going on in galaxies and other things far, far away. In Physical Review Letters, the international IceCube collaboration reports observation of the highest energy neutrinos ever recorded. If confirmed by additional observations, the events could be the iceberg’s tip of a cosmic flux of unusually high-energy neutrinos, unknown until now. These messengers could be carrying information about gamma-ray bursts and active galactic nuclei that may have produced them.

IceCube consists of strings of photomultiplier tubes lowered into boreholes at the South Pole and comprises about one cubic kilometer of ice. Its 5160 detectors are triggered by Cherenkov photons from energetic particles moving through the 2,800-meter-thick polar ice cap. The team recorded two particle showers initiated by neutrinos in which all the collision debris was contained within the detector volume. Adding up the energies of these secondary particles and working backwards, the authors calculated that the energies of the initial neutrinos were above 1 peta-electron-volt ( 1015 electron volts), about ten orders of magnitude higher than typical neutrinos from the Sun.

The researchers are cautious about claiming too much for only two neutrino observations, discovered in nearly two years of stored IceCube data, but the probability of such events arising from background effects is only 0.29%. Really nailing down whether such events arise from astrophysical sources will require more data. – David Voss


Subject Areas

Astrophysics

Related Articles

An Elusive Black Hole Comes into View
Astrophysics

An Elusive Black Hole Comes into View

Observations of seven fast-moving stars at the center of a dense star cluster in the Milky Way reveal the presence of an intermediate-mass black hole, perhaps the most puzzling class of these dark objects. Read More »

Dark Matter Could Bring Black Holes Together
Astrophysics

Dark Matter Could Bring Black Holes Together

Dark matter that interacts with itself could extract significant momentum from a binary supermassive black hole system, causing the black holes to merge. Read More »

A Puzzling Excess of Cosmic Deuterons
Nuclear Physics

A Puzzling Excess of Cosmic Deuterons

A long-running experiment aboard the International Space Station has found an unexpected population of cosmic rays made of heavy hydrogen ions. Read More »

More Articles