6533b81ffe1ef96bd1277a72

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Another way of looking at the sky: Neutrino telescopes

Juan De Dios Zornoza GómezJuan José Hernández ReyJuan Zúñiga Román

subject

PhysicsMultidisciplinaryCOSMIC cancer databaseAstrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical PhenomenaSolar neutrinoAstrophysics::Instrumentation and Methods for AstrophysicsAstronomyCosmic rayAstrophysicsSolar neutrino problemHistory and Philosophy of ScienceNeutrino detectorObservatoryNeutrino astronomyNeutrino

description

Neutrinos are weakly-interacting neutral particles, which makes them powerful sources of information about the most energetic processes in the universe, such as the origin of ultra-energetic cosmic rays or gamma-ray bursts. However, a price must be paid in order to detect them: gargantuan detectors at the bottom of the sea or under the Antarctic ice are required. The detection of the first high-energy cosmic neutrinos in 2013 by the IceCube observatory represented the start of so-called neutrino astronomy, a new way of observing the universe, which can play a key role in future discoveries. In this article, we describe how neutrino telescopes work, as well as the different initial configurations that made this new twenty-first century astronomy possible.

https://doi.org/10.7203/metode.7.8504