12–23 Jul 2021
Online
Europe/Berlin timezone

A New Search for Neutrino Point Sources with IceCube

19 Jul 2021, 18:00
1h 30m
05

05

Talk NU | Neutrinos & Muons Discussion

Speaker

Dr Hans Niederhausen (Technical University of Munich)

Description

The IceCube Neutrino Observatory, deployed beneath the South Pole, is the largest neutrino telescope in the World. While eight years have passed since IceCube discovered a diffuse flux of high-energy astrophysical neutrinos, the sources of the vast majority of these neutrinos remain unknown. Here, we present a new search for neutrino point sources that improves the accuracy of the statistical analysis, especially in the low energy regime. We replaced the usual Gaussian approximations of IceCube's point spread function with precise numerical representations, obtained from simulations, and combined them with new machine learning-based estimates of event energies and angular errors. Depending on source properties, the new analysis provides improved source localization, flux characterization and thereby discovery potential (by up to 30%) over previous works. The analysis will be applied to IceCube data that has been recorded with the full 86-string detector configuration from 2011 to 2020 and includes improved detector calibration

Keywords

IceCube; Neutrino Point Sources

Subcategory Experimental Results
Collaboration IceCube

Primary authors

Dr Hans Niederhausen (Technical University of Munich) Mr Theo Glauch (Technical University of Munich) Ms Chiara Bellenghi (Technical University of Munich) Tomas Kontrimas (Technical University of Munich) Dr Christian Haack (Technical University of Munich) Dr Martin Wolf (Technical University of Munich) Dr Rene Reimann (RWTH Aachen) for the IceCube Collaboration

Presentation materials