12–23 Jul 2021
Online
Europe/Berlin timezone

A novel microstructure based model to explain the IceCube ice anisotropy

16 Jul 2021, 12:00
1h 30m
05

05

Talk NU | Neutrinos & Muons Discussion

Speaker

Martin Rongen (JGU Mainz)

Description

The IceCube Neutrino Observatory instruments about 1 km$^3$ of deep, glacial ice at the geographic South Pole using 5160 photomultipliers to detect Cherenkov light from relativistic, charged particles. Most IceCube science goals rely on precise understanding and modeling of the optical properties of the instrumented ice. A peculiar light propagation effect observed by IceCube is an anisotropic attenuation, which is aligned with the local flow of the ice. Recent efforts have shown this effect is most likely due to curved photon trajectories resulting from the asymmetric light diffusion in the birefringent polycrystalline microstructure of the ice. This new model can be optimized by adjusting the average size and shape of the ice crystals. We present the parametrization of the birefringence effect in our photon propagation simulation, the fitting procedures and results. The impact of the new ice model on the agreement between data and Monte Carlo is also discussed.

Keywords

calibration; ice properties

Subcategory Experimental Results
Collaboration IceCube

Primary authors

Presentation materials