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WIPAC – Wisconsin IceCube Particle Astrophysics CenterWIPAC – Wisconsin IceCube Particle Astrophysics Center
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Author Archives: Jean DeMerit

Archives
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news_feat_2016-week-46-at-pole
Week 46 at the Pole

Ok, they’re gone, but you can see them one last time in this photo taken [...]

news_feat_2016-week-45-at-pole
Week 45 at the Pole

Last week at the Pole was a week of no airplanes. Not only did [...]

news_feat_2016-week-44-at-pole
Week 44 at the Pole

Last week brought two new IceCube winterovers (James Casey and Martin Wolf) to the South [...]

news_feat_2016-week-43-at-pole
Week 43 at the Pole

Come summer, station personnel eagerly await the first provisions of “freshies,” as they’re called at [...]

news_feat_2016-week-42-at-pole
Week 42 at the Pole

This nice sun halo (properly called a 22º halo) that appeared directly above the IceCube [...]

news_feat_2016-week-41-at-pole
Week 41 at the Pole

Last week at the Pole, the first two planes of the season arrived (and then [...]

news_feat_2016-week-40-at-pole
Week 40 at the Pole

Although the South Pole is essentially a desert, a hefty accumulation of snow occurs on [...]

news_feat_2016-week-39-at-pole
Week 39 at the Pole

With the sun out, you can see again—and here we see all the flags surrounding [...]

news_feat_2016-week-38-at-pole
Week 38 at the Pole

Flags serve an important purpose at the Pole, marking out routes between places for when [...]

news_feat_2016-week-37-at-pole
Week 37 at the Pole

Up, up, and away. That’s a NOAA balloon launch shown in a time-lapse photo—pretty [...]

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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 at the University of Wisconsin–Madison.

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