(GIST OF SCIENCE REPORTER) ICECUBE NEUTRINO OBSERVATORY
(GIST OF SCIENCE REPORTER) ICECUBE NEUTRINO OBSERVATORY
(APRIL-2024)
ICECUBE NEUTRINO OBSERVATORY
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The researchers have discovered occurrences in IceCube data from 2011 to 2020 that, with a confidence level of greater than 99.99%, fit the signature of tau (τ) type neutrinos.
Key details
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The IceCube neutrino observatory at the South Pole detects neutrinos, which is one of the subatomic particles.
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The University of Wisconsin, Madison is the founding institution of the IceCube Collaboration, a global consortium of universities that constructed and maintains it.
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IceCube is made up of many detectors on the surface and hundreds of sensors buried more than 1.4 km below the ice.
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The primary goal of IceCube, the first gigaton neutrino detector ever constructed, is to see neutrinos from the universe’s most violent astrophysical sources.
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From their sources to Earth, neutrinos—almost massless particles devoid of any electric charge—can travel with little to no attenuation and no magnetic field deflection.
Neutrinos
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Light particles called neutrinos hardly ever interact with matter.
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They are referred to as “ghost particles” for this reason.
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There are three different forms of neutrinos: tau, muon, and electron neutrinos.
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It is estimated that it will take a century for a single neutrino to interact with a sensor in a human-sized neutrino detector. The likelihood of finding neutrinos increases with the detector’s collecting area size.
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Courtesy: Science Reporter