Observation of high-energy neutrinos using Čerenkov detectors embedded deep in Antarctic ice
- 22 March 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 410 (6827) , 441-443
- https://doi.org/10.1038/35068509
Abstract
Neutrinos are elementary particles that carry no electric charge and have little mass. As they interact only weakly with other particles, they can penetrate enormous amounts of matter, and therefore have the potential to directly convey astrophysical information from the edge of the Universe and from deep inside the most cataclysmic high-energy regions1. The neutrino's great penetrating power, however, also makes this particle difficult to detect. Underground detectors have observed low-energy neutrinos from the Sun and a nearby supernova2, as well as neutrinos generated in the Earth's atmosphere. But the very low fluxes of high-energy neutrinos from cosmic sources can be observed only by much larger, expandable detectors in, for example, deep water3,4 or ice5. Here we report the detection of upwardly propagating atmospheric neutrinos by the ice-based Antarctic muon and neutrino detector array (AMANDA). These results establish a technology with which to build a kilometre-scale neutrino observatory necessary for astrophysical observations1.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- High-Energy Neutrino AstrophysicsAnnual Review of Nuclear and Particle Science, 2000
- An upper limit on the diffuse flux of high energy neutrinos obtained with the Baikal detector NT-96Astroparticle Physics, 2000
- The AMANDA neutrino telescope: principle of operation and first resultsAstroparticle Physics, 2000
- High Energy Neutrinos from Cosmological Gamma-Ray Burst FireballsPhysical Review Letters, 1997
- Implications of optical properties of ocean, lake, and ice for ultrahigh-energy neutrino detectionApplied Optics, 1997
- Particle astrophysics with high energy neutrinosPhysics Reports, 1995
- Optical Properties of the South Pole Ice at Depths Between 0.8 and 1 KilometerScience, 1995
- Neutrino astronomyReports on Progress in Physics, 1992
- The birth of high-energy neutrino astronomy: A personal history of the DUMAND projectReviews of Modern Physics, 1992
- Observation of muons using the polar ice cap as a Cerenkov detectorNature, 1991