MANTS Meeting

Europe/Berlin
Garching, Germany

Garching, Germany

LRZ Leibniz-Rechenzentrum der Bayerischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, Boltzmannstraße 1, 85748 Garching <img alt src="https://events.icecube.wisc.edu/conferenceDisplay.py/getPic?picId=1&confId=52"> Directions to the <a href="http://www.lrz.de/wir/kontakt/weg_en/">LRZ</a> Buy the XXL train ticket each day from downtown Munich. As you leave the Garching Forschungszentrum station, walk straight ahead along the avenue of poplar trees. Our building will then be the last one on the right, and Kim will be to the right after you go in the door on that corner. You can check the price of your train ticket <a href="http://www.mvv-muenchen.de/en/homepage/index.html">here</a>
Description
The MANTS meeting will be in Garching, Germany near Munich on Oct 14-15. The fee for the meeting will be 150 Euros to be paid with cash upon arrival.
The banquet will be Monday night, 20:00 at CAVOS Taverna, Koeniginstraße, 34, 80802 Muenchen www.cavos-taverna.de
Abstracts
Slides
Participants
  • aart heijboer
  • Agata Trovato
  • Agustín Sánchez Losa
  • Albrecht Karle
  • Alexander Avrorin
  • Alexander Kappes
  • Allan Hallgren
  • Andreas Gross
  • Anna Bernhard
  • Annarita Margiotta
  • Antoine Kouchner
  • Apostolos Tsirigotis
  • Bair Shaybonov
  • Benjamin Whelan
  • Bruny Baret
  • Carlos de los Heros
  • Chad Finley
  • Christian Spiering
  • Christian Walck
  • Christoph Tönnis
  • Christopher Wiebusch
  • Clancy James
  • Claudio Kopper
  • Damien Dornic
  • David Altmann
  • David Boersma
  • David Seckel
  • Dmitry Chirkin
  • Dominik Stransky
  • Dorothea Samtleben
  • Doug Cowen
  • Elim Cheung
  • Elisa Resconi
  • Erwin Visser
  • Florian Folger
  • George Bourlis
  • Gisela Anton
  • Jacob Feintzeig
  • Jannik Hofestädt
  • Javier Barrios Martí
  • Jonas Reubelt
  • Juan-Jose Hernandez-Rey
  • Juan-Pablo Yanez
  • Juande Zornoza
  • Julia Schmid
  • Jurgen Brunner
  • Jutta Schnabel
  • Kai Krings
  • Kay Graf
  • Kim Kreiger
  • Klas Hultqvist
  • Kurt Woschnagg
  • Laurentiu Ioan Caramete
  • Lew Classen
  • Lilia Drakopoulou
  • Luigi Antonio Fusco
  • Lukas Schulte
  • Maarten de Jong
  • Maria Tselengidou
  • Mark Aartsen
  • Markus Ahlers
  • Markus Vehring
  • Martijn Jongen
  • Matteo Sanguineti
  • Miguel Ardid
  • Oleg Kalekin
  • Olga Botner
  • Paolo Desiati
  • Paschal Coyle
  • Per-Olof Hulth
  • Piera Sapienza
  • Rezo Shanidze
  • Robert Bormuth
  • Rodrigo Gracia
  • Ronald Bruijn
  • Rosa Coniglione
  • Salvatore Galatà
  • Sebastian Böser
  • Stefan Coenders
  • Stephan Schulte
  • Tamas Gal
  • Thomas Eberl
  • Thomas Gaisser
  • Thomas Heid
  • Thomas Seitz
  • Timo Karg
  • Tino Michael
  • Tyce DeYoung
  • Uli Katz
  • Veronique Van Elewyck
  • Vincent Bertin
  • Vlad Popa
  • Vladimir Aynutdinov
  • Walter Winter
  • Zhan-Arys Dzhilkibaev
  • Monday, 14 October
    • 08:30 09:29
      Registration All Day
    • 09:29 09:30
      Status and Highlights from Experiments: HE 009 - near Kim
    • 09:30 09:50
      IceCube: Albrecht Karle
      • 09:30
        IceCube 20m
        Status and Highlights
        Speaker: Albrecht Karle (o=uwmad,ou=Institutions,dc=icecube,dc=wisc,dc=edu)
        Slides
    • 09:50 10:05
      Antares: Juan-Jose Hernandez-Rey
      • 09:50
        ANTARES Highlights 15m
        A few selected ANTARES results will be reported.
        Speaker: Juan Jose Hernandez-Rey (IFIC (CSIC-UV))
        Slides
    • 10:05 10:25
      Baikal / GVD: Zhan-Arys Dzhilkibaev
      • 10:05
        Baikal/GVD 20m
        The Prototyping phase of the BAIKAL-GVD project has been started in April 2011 with the deployment of a three string engineering array which comprises all basic elements and systems of the Gigaton Volume Detector (GVD) in Lake Baikal. In April 2012 the version of engineering array which comprises the first full-scale string of the GVD demonstration cluster has been deployed and operated during 2012. The first stage of the GVD demonstration cluster which consists of three strings is deployed in April 2013. We describe the configuration and design of the 2013 engineering array and discussed the first results of array operation.
        Speaker: Prof. Zhan-Arys Dzhilkibaev (Institute for nuclear research)
        Slides
    • 10:25 10:40
      KM3Net: Uli Katz
      • 10:25
        News from KM3NeT 15m
        The KM3NeT neutrino telescope in the Mediterranean Sea is approaching the first construction phase in 2014/15. The technical solutions to be implemented will be discussed and first results of prototyping activities presented. The talk will conclude with an outlook to the future plans for KM3NeT.
        Speaker: Prof. Uli Katz (ECAP / Univ. Erlangen)
        Slides
    • 10:40 11:00
      Astrophysical Interpretation of IceCube Excess: Markus Ahlers
      • 10:40
        Astrophysical Interpretations of the IceCube Excess 20m
        I summarize excluded and tentative explanations of the IceCube excess and highlight multi-messenger studies.
        Speaker: Markus Ahlers (o=uwmad,ou=Institutions,dc=icecube,dc=wisc,dc=edu)
        Slides
    • 11:00 11:29
      Break 29m
    • 11:30 13:00
      Low Energy: Horsal HE 008
      • 11:30
        Introducing WOM: The Wavelength-Shifting Optical Module 20m
        Large-scale underground water-Cherenkov neutrino observatories rely on single photon sensors whose sensitive area for Cherenkov photons one wants to maximise. Low dark noise rates and dense module spacing will thereby allow to substantially decrease the energy threshold in future projects. We describe a feasibility study of a novel type of single photon sensor that employs organic wavelength-shifting material (WLS) to capture Cherenkov photons and guide them to a PMT readout. Different WLS materials have been tested in lab measurements as candidates for use in such a sensor and photon capture efficiencies as high as 50 % have been achieved. Based on these findings we estimate that the effective photosensitive area of a prototype built with existing technology can easily exceed that of modules currently used e. g. in IceCube. Additionally, the dark noise rate of such a module can be exceptionally low in the order of 10 Hz. This is of special importance when targeting low-energy neutrinos that yield only few photons that need to be distinguished from noise hits
        Speaker: Lukas Schulte (o=bonn,ou=Institutions,dc=icecube,dc=wisc,dc=edu)
        Slides
      • 12:10
        PINGU Precision for Atmospheric Oscillation Parameters 20m
        ...
        Speaker: Mr Kai Krings (o=rwth,ou=Institutions,dc=icecube,dc=wisc,dc=edu)
        Slides
    • 11:30 13:00
      Simulations: Horsal HE 009
      • 11:30
        Status of simulations for ORCA 15m
        Simulation activities for the feasibility study of ORCA for measuring the neutrino mass hierarchy are described. The two mainstream simulation chains, one with a 'reference' detector and one with a dense detector are presented.
        Speaker: Salvatore Galata (APC)
      • 11:45
        The km3 simulation package 20m
        The km3 simulation package is the standard software suite used by the ANTARES collaboration to simulate the emission and detection of Cherenkov photons. Here, the three programs comprising km3 are described, and the performance of km3's latest revision evaluated. Particular focus is paid to the use of the one-particle approximation, by which Cherenkov emission from hadronic cascades is simulated, and its applicability to ANTARES, KM3NeT, and ORCA.
        Speaker: Dr Clancy James (University of Erlangen-Nuernberg)
        Slides
      • 12:05
        Understanding Atmospheric Background in Neutrino Telescopes 20m
        In this presentation I'll review the importance to improve atmospheric neutrino production to probe the sources of systematics in the background estimation for neutrino telescopes. The generation of prompt components by heavy quark mesons is also discussed.
        Speaker: Dr Paolo Desiati (University of Wisconsin - Madison)
        Slides
      • 12:25
        Trigger Studies for ORCA 15m
        Trigger algorithms and evaluation of trigger performances for the ORCA detector.
        Speaker: Mr Tamas Gal (ECAP)
        Slides
      • 12:40
        Atmospheric muons rejection for ORCA 15m
        A strong background for the observation of atmospheric neutrino induced upgoing muons is due to the presence of wrongly reconstructed muons. A strategy for the rejection of this background is presented, relying on the output of the reconstruction code "reco".
        Speaker: Mr Luigi Antonio Fusco (INFN and University of Bologna)
        Slides
    • 13:00 14:29
      Lunch will be provided 1h 29m
    • 14:29 14:30
      Future Detectors - Low Energy: HE 009 - near Kim
    • 14:30 14:45
      DeepCore oscillation results: Juan-Pablo Yanez
      • 14:30
        DeepCore oscillation results 15m
        Oscillation results from the first year of the completed IceCube DeepCore detector
        Speaker: Mr Juan-Pablo Yanez (DESY)
        Slides
    • 14:45 15:10
      Studies to PINGU's sensitivity to Neutrino Mass Hierarchy: Gross/Clark
      • 14:45
        Studies to PINGU's sensitivity to Neutrino Mass Hierarchy 20m
        Studies to PINGU's sensitivity to Neutrino Mass Hierarchy
        Speaker: Andreas Gross (TU Munich)
        Slides
    • 15:10 15:35
      ORCA mass hierarchy sensitivity study: Aart Heijboer
      • 15:10
        ORCA mass hierarchy sensitivity study 25m
        ORCA mass hierarchy sensitivity study
        Speaker: aart heijboer (nikhef)
        Slides
    • 15:35 15:55
      Intrinsic physics limitations: Clancy James / Jannik Hofestadt
      • 15:35
        Intrinsic physics limitations to reconstruction 20m
        At the characteristic energies (~20 GeV and below) at which ORCA/PINGU will look for hierarchy-dependent effects in the neutrino interaction rate, random fluctuations in the event characteristics will play a significant roll in limiting the accuracy of any reconstruction. In this contribution, the effects of such fluctuations in the determination of the energy and direction of muon tracks and shower events is investigated for neutrino interactions in seawater. These are presented as limitations both for a 'perfect' detector (all photons detected) and the reference ORCA detector, where only some photons will be detected.
        Speaker: Dr Clancy James (University of Erlangen-Nuernberg)
        Slides
    • 16:00 16:29
      Break 29m
    • 16:29 16:30
      Future Detectors - Low Energy: HE 009 - near Kim
    • 16:30 16:50
      Studies to PINGU's sensitivity to Neutrino Mass Hierarchy: Walter Winter
      • 16:30
        PINGU mass hierarchy sensitivity 20m
        I present an independent study of the PINGU mass hierarchy sensitivity based on the GLoBES (General Long Baseline Experiment Simulator) software, with the same methods and assumptions as used for the beam experiments. Particular attention will be given to the treatment of experiment properties and parameter correlations.
        Speaker: Dr Walter Winter (Wurzburg university)
        Slides
    • 16:50 17:10
      Beam options: Jurgen Brunner
      • 16:50
        Beam options 20m
        The potential of a long baseline neutrino beam pointing towards PINGU or ORCA is discussed in the context of the neutrino mass hierarchy determination
        Speaker: Mr Juergen Brunner (DESY)
        Slides
    • 17:10 18:00
      Discussion
    • 19:30 22:30
      Social Dinner - CAVOS Taverna, Koeniginstrasse, 34 80802 Muenchen www.cavos-taverna.de
  • Tuesday, 15 October
    • 09:30 11:00
      Reconstruction: High Energy - Horsal 008
      • 09:30
        The cascade reconstruction in the Baikal experiment 20m
        A new analysis of the data from the NT200 neutrino telescope based on the reconstruction of parameters for high-energy cascades generated in neutrino interactions has yielded new upper limits on the diffuse neutrino fluxes predicted by a number of theoretical models. The upper limit on the all-flavor neutrino flux with an energy spectrum E-2 is 2.9 10-7 GeV cm-2 s-1 ster-1
        Speaker: Bair Shaybonov (JINR)
        Slides
      • 09:50
        Cascade Reconstruction in IceCube 20m
        Cascade Reconstruction in IceCube
        Speaker: Claudio Kopper (o=uwmad,ou=Institutions,dc=icecube,dc=wisc,dc=edu)
        Slides
      • 10:10
        Shower reconstruction and analysis with ANTARES & KM3NeT 20m
        An overview of the shower activities in ANTARES & KM3NeT
        Speaker: Florian Folger (Mr)
        Slides
      • 10:30
        Event fitting with direct event re-simulation 20m
        DirectFit, likelihood, GZK cluster
        Speaker: Dmitry Chirkin (o=uwmad,ou=Institutions,dc=icecube,dc=wisc,dc=edu)
        Slides
    • 09:30 11:00
      Reconstruction: Low Energy - Konferenzraum - down the stairs across from Kim into the building next door, up one flight of stairs, and follow the signs to the room
      • 09:30
        Neutrino reconstruction for PINGU 15m
        Level 2 reconstruction for PINGU is discussed in this talk. In addition to standard reconstruction algorithms used in IceCube and PINGU, it includes new reconstruction algorithms like Santa, IgelFit and HybridReco/MultiNest.
        Speaker: Dr Rezo Shanidze (DESY)
        Slides
      • 09:45
        Reconstruction and energy estimation for tracks 15m
        The reconstruction algorithm used for the ORCA feasibility study will be described. The code reconstructs the direction of muon track coming from the muon neutrino and estimates the muon energy. The performance of the algorithm will be shown.
        Speaker: Agata Trovato (LNS - INFN)
        Slides
      • 10:00
        Reconstruction and energy estimation for tracks 15m
        Results for an alternative track reconstruction in Orca using the GridFit method developed within Antares.
        Speaker: Mr Robert Bormuth (Nikhef)
      • 10:15
        Flavor Separation 15m
        The talk is about the afforts which are taken to distinguish between track-like events and shower-like events. In ORCA it is necessary to make this decision as the calculations for mass hierarchy determination is based on muon neutrinos.
        Speaker: Mr Thomas Heid (ECAP)
        Slides
      • 10:30
        A particle identification algorithm for PINGU 15m
        We will describe a particle identification algorithm based on identification of "superluminal" hits -- photons arriving earlier than expected from propagation of light from a reconstructed cascade vertex.
        Speaker: Ty DeYoung (o=psu,ou=Institutions,dc=icecube,dc=wisc,dc=edu)
        Slides
    • 11:00 11:29
      Break 29m
    • 11:29 11:30
      Future Detectors - High Energy: Horsaal 008
    • 11:30 11:50
      Neutrino Self-Veto: Tom Gaisser
      • 11:30
        Atmospheric neutrino self-veto 20m
        Muons produced in the same event as an atmospheric neutrino will exclude the atmospheric neutrino from a sample of events required to originate inside a fiducial volume of a detector. I will discuss how the veto is evaluated for use in the IceCube High Energy Starting Event analysis.
        Speaker: Thomas Gaisser (University of Delaware)
        Slides
    • 11:50 12:10
      Intermediate energy starting tracks: Jacob Feintzeig
      • 11:50
        Lowering IceCube's energy threshold for point source searches in the southern sky 20m
        Veto techniques are opening up new doors for point source searches in IceCube. Traditional IceCube point source analyses are only sensitive to PeV-scale fluxes in the southern hemisphere. We demonstrate that extending the “high-energy starting event” veto to lower energies allows IceCube to probe southern sky sources in the 10 TeV – 1 PeV regime. After discussing the event selection and analysis method, we will show projected sensitivities and compare them to ANTARES point source analyses.
        Speaker: Jacob Feintzeig (University of Wisconsin--Madison)
        Slides
    • 12:10 12:30
      Veto and HE Starting Events - Nathan Whitehorn
      • 12:10
        IceCube In-Ice Veto For High-Energy Starting Events 20m
        Description of event selection and in-data background estimation used in the recent IceCube high-energy results, along with other details on the analysis.
        Speaker: Nathan Whitehorn (o=uwmad,ou=Institutions,dc=icecube,dc=wisc,dc=edu)
        Slides
    • 12:30 12:45
      Air Cherenkov Surface Veto: Tyce DeYoung
      • 12:30
        A low energy air Cherenkov veto system 15m
        Preliminary ideas regarding a surface veto array based on simple imaging air Cherenkov telescopes will be presented. Early studies suggest that cosmic ray primaries responsible for atmospheric neutrinos above an energy threshold of a few TeV could be tagged efficiently.
        Speaker: Tyce DeYoung (o=psu,ou=Institutions,dc=icecube,dc=wisc,dc=edu)
        Slides
    • 12:45 13:44
      Lunch 59m
    • 13:44 13:45
      Future Detectors - High Energy: Horsaal 008
    • 13:45 14:00
      Considerations for surface veto strategies / IceVeto: Albrecht Karle / Jan Auffenberg
      • 13:45
        Considerations for a surface veto array and a look at event rates 15m
        I will have a brief look at a surface veto array upgrade. Simulated event rates in IceCube suggest that surface veto detectors will add of order 10 muon neutrino events after atmospheric veto cut depending the threshold. Such strategies may offer benefits for lower energy source searches. They need to be compared to other muon neutrino search channels.
        Speaker: Albrecht Karle (o=uwmad,ou=Institutions,dc=icecube,dc=wisc,dc=edu)
        Slides
    • 14:00 14:20
      Multi-string extensions / IceCube ++ studies: Christopher Wiebusch / David Altmann
      • 14:00
        DecaCube Part I 10m
        Part I
        Speaker: Mr David Altmann (o=humboldt,ou=Institutions,dc=icecube,dc=wisc,dc=edu)
        Slides
      • 14:10
        DecaCube - IceCube++ - Part II 10m
        C
        Speaker: Prof. Christopher Wiebusch (o=rwth,ou=Institutions,dc=icecube,dc=wisc,dc=edu)
        Slides
    • 14:20 14:40
      KM3NeT options: Rosa Coniglione
      • 14:20
        KM3NeT and diffuse flux: first preliminary results 20m
        The prediction on diffuse flux for the KM3NeT will be shown.
        Speaker: Dr Rosa Coniglione (INFN-Laboratori Nazionali del Sud)
        Slides
    • 14:40 14:59
      Discussion
    • 14:59 15:00
      Future Directions in Neutrino Astronomy: Horsaal 008
    • 15:00 15:20
      Global Neutrino Telescope Coordination: Christian Spiering / TBD
    • 15:20 16:00
      Panel Discussion