832 research outputs found
The ANTARES neutrino telescope: a status report
ANTARES is a large volume neutrino telescope currently under construction off
La Seyne-sur-mer, France, at 2475m depth. Neutrino telescopes aim at detecting
neutrinos as a new probe for a sky study at energies greater than 1 TeV. The
detection principle relies on the observation, using photomultipliers, of the
Cherenkov light emitted by charged leptons induced by neutrino interactions in
the surrounding detector medium. Since late January 2007, the ANTARES detector
consists of 5 lines, comprising 75 optical detectors each, connected to the
shore via a 40 km long undersea cable. The data from these lines not only allow
an extensive study of the detector properties but also the reconstruction of
downward going cosmic ray muons and the search for the first upward going
neutrino induced muons.The operation of these lines follows on from that of the
ANTARES instrumentation line, which has provided data for more than a year on
the detector stability and the environmental conditions. The full 12 line
detector is planned to be fully operational early 2008.Comment: Talk presented at ICRC 200
Measurement of atmospheric neutrino oscillations with very large volume neutrino telescopes
Neutrino oscillations have been probed during the last few decades using
multiple neutrino sources and experimental set-ups. In the recent years, very
large volume neutrino telescopes have started contributing to the field. First
ANTARES and then IceCube have relied on large and sparsely instrumented volumes
to observe atmospheric neutrinos for combinations of baselines and energies
inaccessible to other experiments. Using this advantage, the latest result from
IceCube starts approaching the precision of other established technologies, and
is paving the way for future detectors, such as ORCA and PINGU. These new
projects seek to provide better measurements of neutrino oscillation
parameters, and eventually determine the neutrino mass ordering. The results
from running experiments and the potential from proposed projects are discussed
in this review, emphasizing the experimental challenges involved in the
measurements.Comment: Review paper to appear in the special issue "Neutrino Masses and
Oscillations" of Advances in High Energy Physics (accepted); 22 pages, 24
figure
Possibilité d'observation, par le télescope Antares, de neutrinos de haute énergie associés aux sursauts gamma et validation des techniques de détection à l'aide d'un prototype
PARIS7-Bibliothèque centrale (751132105) / SudocSudocFranceF
The ANTARES Collaboration: Contributions to ICRC 2017 Part I: Neutrino astronomy (diffuse fluxes and point sources)
Papers on neutrino astronomy (diffuse fluxes and point sources, prepared for
the 35th International Cosmic Ray Conference (ICRC 2017, Busan, South Korea) by
the ANTARES Collaboratio
Search for muon-neutrino emission from GeV and TeV gamma-ray flaring blazars using five years of data of the ANTARES telescope
The ANTARES telescope is well-suited for detecting astrophysical transient
neutrino sources as it can observe a full hemisphere of the sky at all times
with a high duty cycle. The background due to atmospheric particles can be
drastically reduced, and the point-source sensitivity improved, by selecting a
narrow time window around possible neutrino production periods. Blazars, being
radio-loud active galactic nuclei with their jets pointing almost directly
towards the observer, are particularly attractive potential neutrino point
sources, since they are among the most likely sources of the very high-energy
cosmic rays. Neutrinos and gamma rays may be produced in hadronic interactions
with the surrounding medium. Moreover, blazars generally show high time
variability in their light curves at different wavelengths and on various time
scales. This paper presents a time-dependent analysis applied to a selection of
flaring gamma-ray blazars observed by the FERMI/LAT experiment and by TeV
Cherenkov telescopes using five years of ANTARES data taken from 2008 to 2012.
The results are compatible with fluctuations of the background. Upper limits on
the neutrino fluence have been produced and compared to the measured gamma-ray
spectral energy distribution.Comment: 27 pages, 16 figure
The ANTARES Collaboration: Contributions to ICRC 2017 Part II: The multi-messenger program
Papers on the ANTARES multi-messenger program, prepared for the 35th
International Cosmic Ray Conference (ICRC 2017, Busan, South Korea) by the
ANTARES Collaboratio
The Antares Collaboration : Contributions to the 34th International Cosmic Ray Conference (ICRC 2015, The Hague)
The ANTARES detector, completed in 2008, is the largest neutrino telescope in the Northern hemisphere. Located at a depth of 2.5 km in the Mediterranean Sea, 40 km off the Toulon shore, its main goal is the search for astrophysical high energy neutrinos. In this paper we collect the 21 contributions of the ANTARES collaboration to the 34th International Cosmic Ray Conference (ICRC 2015). The scientific output is very rich and the contributions included in these proceedings cover the main physics results, ranging from steady point sources, diffuse searches, multi-messenger analyses to exotic physics
The ANTARES Collaboration: Contributions to ICRC 2017 Part III: Searches for dark matter and exotics, neutrino oscillations and detector calibration
Papers on the searches for dark matter and exotics, neutrino oscillations and
detector calibration, prepared for the 35th International Cosmic Ray Conference
(ICRC 2017, Busan, South Korea) by the ANTARES Collaboratio
Mass hierarchy discrimination with atmospheric neutrinos in large volume ice/water Cherenkov detectors
Large mass ice/water Cherenkov experiments, optimized to detect low energy
(1-20 GeV) atmospheric neutrinos, have the potential to discriminate between
normal and inverted neutrino mass hierarchies. The sensitivity depends on
several model and detector parameters, such as the neutrino flux profile and
normalization, the Earth density profile, the oscillation parameter
uncertainties, and the detector effective mass and resolution. A proper
evaluation of the mass hierarchy discrimination power requires a robust
statistical approach. In this work, the Toy Monte Carlo, based on an extended
unbinned likelihood ratio test statistic, was used. The effect of each model
and detector parameter, as well as the required detector exposure, was then
studied. While uncertainties on the Earth density and atmospheric neutrino flux
profiles were found to have a minor impact on the mass hierarchy
discrimination, the flux normalization, as well as some of the oscillation
parameter (\Delta m^2_{31}, \theta_{13}, \theta_{23}, and \delta_{CP})
uncertainties and correlations resulted critical. Finally, the minimum required
detector exposure, the optimization of the low energy threshold, and the
detector resolutions were also investigated.Comment: 23 pages, 16 figure
Background Light in Potential Sites for the ANTARES Undersea Neutrino Telescope
The ANTARES collaboration has performed a series of {\em in situ}
measurements to study the background light for a planned undersea neutrino
telescope. Such background can be caused by K decays or by biological
activity. We report on measurements at two sites in the Mediterranean Sea at
depths of 2400~m and 2700~m, respectively. Three photomultiplier tubes were
used to measure single counting rates and coincidence rates for pairs of tubes
at various distances. The background rate is seen to consist of three
components: a constant rate due to K decays, a continuum rate that
varies on a time scale of several hours simultaneously over distances up to at
least 40~m, and random bursts a few seconds long that are only correlated in
time over distances of the order of a meter. A trigger requiring coincidences
between nearby photomultiplier tubes should reduce the trigger rate for a
neutrino telescope to a manageable level with only a small loss in efficiency.Comment: 18 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in Astroparticle
Physic
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