Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. 24/7 Space News .




TIME AND SPACE
Searching for Cosmic Accelerators Via IceCube
by Lynn Yarris for Berkeley News
Berkeley CA (SPX) Nov 25, 2013


Lisa Gerhardt and Spencer Klein with an IceCube Digital Optical Module (DOM). IceCube employs 5,160 DOMs to detect the Cherenkov radiation emitted by high-energy neutrino events in the ice. (Photo by Roy Kaltschmidt).

In our universe there are particle accelerators 40 million times more powerful than the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN. Scientists don't know what these cosmic accelerators are or where they are located, but new results being reported from "IceCube," the neutrino observatory buried at the South Pole, may show the way. These new results should also erase any doubts as to IceCube's ability to deliver on its promise.

"The IceCube Collaboration has announced the observation of 28 extremely high energy events that constitute the first solid evidence for astrophysical neutrinos from outside our solar system," says Spencer Klein, a senior scientist with Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) and a long-time member of the IceCube Collaboration.

"These 28 events include two of the highest energy neutrinos ever reported, which have been named Bert and Ernie."

The new results from IceCube, which were published in the journal Science, provide experimental confirmation that somewhere in the universe, something is accelerating particles to energies above 50 trillion electron volts (TeV) and, in the cases of Bert and Ernie, exceeding one quadrillion electron volts (PeV). By comparison, the LHC accelerates protons to approximately four TeV in each of its beams.

While not telling scientists what cosmic accelerators are or where they're located, the IceCube results do provide scientists with a compass that can help guide them to the answers.

Cosmic accelerators have announced their presence through the rare ultra-high energy version of cosmic rays, which, despite the name, are electrically-charged particles, mostly protons but also some heavier atomic nuclei like iron.

It is known that ultra-high energy cosmic rays originate from beyond our solar system but the electrical charge they carry bends their flight paths as they pass through interstellar magnetic fields, making it impossible to determine where in the universe they came from.

However as cosmic ray protons and nuclei are accelerated, they interact with gas and light, resulting in the emission of neutrinos with energies proportional to the energies of the cosmic rays that produced them. Electrically neutral and nearly massless, neutrinos are like phantoms that travel through space in a straight line from their point of origin, passing through virtually everything in their path without being impacted.

"The only way neutrinos interact is through the weak nuclear force, so they aren't deflected by magnetic fields in flight, and they easily slip through dense matter like stars that would stop the cosmic rays themselves," Klein says.

"These same qualities that make neutrinos valuable observational tools also make neutrinos a challenge to study."

The IceCube observatory consists of 5,160 basketball-sized light detectors called Digital Optical Modules (DOMs), which were conceived and largely designed at Berkeley Lab.

The DOMS are suspended along 86 strings that are embedded in a cubic kilometer of clear ice starting one and a half kilometers beneath the Antarctic surface. Out of the trillions of neutrinos that pass through the ice each day, a couple of hundred will collide with oxygen nuclei, yielding the blue light of Cherenkov radiation that IceCube's DOMs detect.

"Each of IceCube's DOMs was designed to be a mini-computer server that you can log onto and download data from, or upload software to," says Robert Stokstad, a senior scientist with Berkeley Lab's Nuclear Science Division who led the development of the DOMs and was one of the original proponents of IceCube. "It is rewarding to see how well they are performing."

The 28 high-energy neutrinos reported in Science by the IceCube Collaboration were found in data collected from May 2010 to May 2012. In analyzing more recent data, Berkeley Lab's Lisa Gerhardt discovered another event that was almost double the energy of Bert and Ernie. Dubbed "Big Bird," this new event was presented by Klein at the International Cosmic-Ray Conference.

"Like most scientific discoveries, finding Big Bird was a combination of hard work and luck and it took place on the afternoon of my last day of work on IceCube," Gerhardt says, who at the time of her discovery was with Berkeley Lab's Nuclear Science Division and is now with the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center (NERSC), where the supercomputing resources are being used to sift out neutrino signals from cosmic noise in the IceCube observations.

"At first I was in disbelief, thinking there must be some other explanation for this enormous event," Gerhardt says. "However, one-by-one alternate explanations were disproved until finally we knew that we had found the most energetic event in IceCube yet, most likely from an astrophysical neutrino. I was able to leave IceCube with a bang!"

As to the identity of the mysterious cosmic accelerators, Klein thinks these early results from IceCube favor active galactic nuclei, the enormous particle jets ejected by a black hole after it swallows a star.

"The 28 events being reported are diffuse and do not point back to a source," Klein says, "but the big picture tends to suggest active galactic nuclei as the leading contender with the second leading contender being something we haven't even thought of yet."

The IceCube Collaboration currently consists of more than 200 researchers representing 39 institutions from 11 different countries, including Berkeley Lab. The collaboration is led by the University of Wisconsin-Madison and largely funded through the National Science Foundation. The collaboration's paper in Science is titled "Evidence for High-Energy Extraterrestrial Neutrinos at the IceCube Detector."

"After seeing hundreds of thousands of atmospheric neutrinos, we have found something different," says Francis Halzen, principal investigator of IceCube and the Hilldale and Gregory Breit Distinguished Professor of Physics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

"It is gratifying to finally see what we have been looking for. This is the dawn of a new age of astronomy."

.


Related Links
The IceCube Collaboration
Understanding Time and Space






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








TIME AND SPACE
HZDR researchers simulate electrons in astrophysical plasma jets
Dresden, Germany (SPX) Nov 25, 2013
Physicists of Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf (HZDR) have been able to simulate the motion of billions of electrons within astrophysical plasma jets and calculate the light they emit with the help of a high-performance computer. They have been nominated for the Gordon Bell Prize as a result of their work. On the 20th of November they present their work at the Supercomputing Conference SC13 ... read more


TIME AND SPACE
NASA Spacecraft Begins Collecting Lunar Atmosphere Data

Big Boost for China's Moon Lander

Rediscovered Apollo data gives first measure of how fast Moon dust piles up

NASA's GRAIL Mission Puts a New Face on the Moon

TIME AND SPACE
Winter Means Less Power for Solar Panels

Unusual greenhouse gases may have raised ancient Martian temperature

How Habitable Is Mars? A New View of the Viking Experiments

Rover Team Working to Diagnose Electrical Issue

TIME AND SPACE
NASA Advances Effort to Launch Astronauts Again from US Soil to Space Station

Israeli experts launches space studies course for teachers

Success of 'New Space' era hinges on public's interest

NASA Issues 2014 Call for Advanced Technology Concepts

TIME AND SPACE
China shows off moon rover model before space launch

China providing space training

China launches experimental satellite Shijian-16

China Moon Rover A New Opportunity To Explore Our Nearest Neighbor

TIME AND SPACE
Russians take Olympic torch on historic spacewalk

Russia launches Sochi Olympic torch into space

Spaceflight Joins with NanoRacks to Deploy Satellites from the ISS

Crew Completes Preparations for Soyuz Move

TIME AND SPACE
Spaceflight Deploys Planet Labs' Dove 3 Spacecraft from the Dnepr

Arianespace orders ten new Vega launchers from ELV

NASA Commercial Crew Partner SpaceX Achieves Milestone in Safety Review

ASTRA 5B lands in French Guiana for its upcoming Ariane 5 flight

TIME AND SPACE
NASA Kepler Results Usher in a New Era of Astronomy

Astronomers answer key question: How common are habitable planets?

One in five Sun-like stars may have Earth-like planets

Mystery World Baffles Astronomers

TIME AND SPACE
Overcoming Brittleness: New Insights into Bulk Metallic Glass

SlipChip Counts Molecules with Chemistry and a Cell Phone

NASA Instrument Determines Hazards of Deep-Space Radiation

$3.3 billion Canadian mining project scrapped




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement