ICECUBE NEUTRINO OBSERVATORY
Largest Neutrino Telescope
1 gigaton of ice
5160 Digital Optical Modules
1 square kilometer surface array
2 nanosecond time resolution
100GB of data generated daily
AMANDA (Antartic Muon And Neutrino Detector Array)
Proof-of-concept for IceCube
677 optical modules
19 strings
Total Strings
[2005] 1
[2006] 9
[2007] 22
[2008] 40
[2009] 59
[2010] 79
[2011] 86
IceTop
Cherenkov detector
Positioned on the surface of the glacier
Used as a cosmic ray shower detector
Coincident event tests
IceTop
ELECTRONICS
PMT
"DeepCore"
Densely instrumented region
Extends the observable energies below 100 GeV
Located at the center near the clearest ice at the bottom of the array (1760m and 2450m deep)
"Strings"
1.0 PeV
1.1 PeV
2.2 PeV
But how do we "
actually
" detect neutrinos?
Cherenkov Radiation!
But what about other leptons from air shower?
Muons produced by Pion and Kaon decays enter at 2.8kHz
We need an effective veto mechanism
Event selection identifies neutrino interactions by rejecting particles entering from outside the detector
Neutrino Flavors
Muon Neutrino
Muon is the most penetrating
Generates the longest "
tracks
"
Electron Neutrino
Electrons scatters multiple time
Cannot be used to point back to source
Generates "
cascade
"
Tau Neutrino
Short-lived
Cannot travel long before decaying
988-day sample
37 events
30 - 2000 TeV
Identifying point sources
Origin of highest energy cosmic rays
Travel to earth with little deflection
Unbinned maximum likelihood method
Results
Evidence for high-energy extraterrestrial neutrinos
Equal fluxes with all three neutrino flavors with isotropic arrival direction
Future
Gamma ray bursts coincident with neutrinos
Indirect dark matter searches
Neutrino oscillations
Galactic supernovae
Sterile Neutrinos
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