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WIPAC – Wisconsin IceCube Particle Astrophysics CenterWIPAC – Wisconsin IceCube Particle Astrophysics Center
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Yearly Archives: 2017

Archives
  • 2023 (13)
  • 2022 (75)
  • 2021 (118)
  • 2020 (68)
  • 2019 (70)
  • 2018 (66)
  • 2017 (72)
  • 2016 (66)
  • 2015 (72)
  • 2014 (84)
  • 2013 (71)
  • 2012 (40)
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Week 50 at the Pole

Last week was a busy one at the Pole. A lot of holiday preparations [...]

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Do fast radio bursts emit high-energy neutrinos?

Although fast radio bursts’ (FRBs) progenitors are supposed to be compact and perhaps catastrophic cosmic [...]

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Week 49 at the Pole

There’s always something going on at the Pole, and last week was no different. [...]

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Week 48 at the Pole

The many flight delays this season affected the arrival of not only personnel but cargo, [...]

Hawc_GraphImageFinal
First measurement of the cosmic-ray spectrum with HAWC

In a study published today in the journal Physical Review D, HAWC announces a measurement [...]

news_feat_2017-week-47-at-pole
Week 47 at the Pole

It was a busy week for IceCube’s newest winterovers. A plane arrived after a [...]

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Week 46 at the Pole

Last week kept IceCube’s newest winterovers busy, but not too busy, with a number of [...]

HighEnergyNeutrino
Ice-bound detector reveals how ghostly neutrinos are stopped cold

In a critical measurement that may one day help predict new physics beyond the Standard [...]

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Week 45 at the Pole

Flight canceled? Well, that happens. But, canceled … again? Welcome to plane [...]

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HAWC sheds new light on origin of mysterious antimatter excess

The HAWC Collaboration has made the first detailed measurements of two pulsars touted as possible [...]

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WIPAC

WIPAC is focused on neutrino astrophysics, operating the IceCube Neutrino Observatory and other projects around the world.

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WIPAC is a scientific center within the Office of the Vice Chancellor for Research and Graduate Education at the University of Wisconsin–Madison.

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