Misel Colloquium: Francis Halzen, University of Wisconsin - Madison

IceCube: High-Energy Cosmic Neutrinos and their First Sources

Abstract: Below the geographic South Pole, the IceCube project has transformed one cubic kilometer of natural Antarctic ice into a neutrino detector. IceCube detects more than 100,000 neutrinos per year in the GeV to 10 PeV energy range. From those, we have isolated a flux of high-energy neutrinos originating beyond our Galaxy, with an energy flux that is comparable to that of the extragalactic high-energy photon flux observed by the NASA Fermi satellite. With a decade of data, we have identified their first sources, which point to the obscured dense cores associated with the supermassive black holes of some active galaxies as the origin of high-energy neutrinos (and cosmic rays!).



 
Zoom: https://umn.zoom.us/j/99621284022

Category
Start date
Thursday, Sept. 14, 2023, 3:35 p.m.
End date
Thursday, Sept. 14, 2023, 4:35 p.m.
Location

B50 Tate Hall/zoom

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