The IceCube Neutrino Observatory is a cubic-kilometer neutrino detector built into the deep glacial ice at the geographic South Pole. Using an array of optical sensors, IceCube detects the Cherenkov light emitted by secondary charged particles produced by neutrino interactions. Following the initial discovery of a diffuse astrophysical neutrino flux a decade ago, recent searches have also...
The IceCube Neutrino Observatory is a cubic-kilometer array of 5160 photosensors instrumenting the deep, glacial ice at the geographic South Pole. It detects Cherenkov light emitted by charged particles resulting from neutrino interactions. The spatial and temporal distributions of light in the detector allow to infer the energies and directions of the original neutrinos. As the detector...
The Radio Neutrino Observatory - Greenland (RNO-G) is currently under construction in proximity of Summit Station, 3216 m above sea level.
The observatory consists of an array of independent stations, each including both a deep component (with fifteen vertically and horizontally polarized antennas in three 100m-deep boreholes, configured partially as a phased array trigger) and a shallow...
The IceCube Observatory at the South Pole has detected high energy neutrinos of cosmic origin, including point sources and unresolved Galactic and extragalactic source populations. The extensions to IceCube include the fully funded and under construction low energy, finely segmented extension of the detector (IceCube Upgrade) and a future high energy, high statistics next generation telescope...