Tag Archives: neutrino astronomy

Solving the mysteries of cosmic rays

Since cosmic rays were discovered in 1912, scientists have sought the origins of these mysterious [...]

WIPAC alumnus Markus Ahlers receives $1.2 million to continue his work with IceCube

After a five-year John Bahcall postdoctoral fellowship at WIPAC, astroparticle physicist Markus Ahlers returned to [...]

APS April meeting highlights: IceCube results on neutrino oscillations and WIPAC talks

The American Physical Society meeting on astronomy, astrophysics, cosmology and particle physics, the so-called April [...]

Five years since IceCube Neutrino Observatory completion

Decades ago, the aspiration to build a kilometer-scale neutrino detector at the South Pole seemed [...]

Star-forming galaxies are not the main source of IceCube neutrinos

IceCube data are stubbornly showing us only a glimpse of the extreme universe at a [...]

Antarctic neutrino detector firms up cosmic neutrino sighting

Sorting through the billions of subatomic particles that zip through its frozen cubic-kilometer-sized detector each [...]

A new year of data for IceCube

Not everyone begins a new year on January 1, right? That includes IceCubers, who decided [...]

Going green on the white continent

An Akyaryan Radio Array solar panel rests on top of a gear box before being [...]

IceCube 2014 in brief

IceCube cosmic-ray results were also used alongside observations from NASA’s Interstellar Boundary Explorer, or IBEX, [...]

Designing the future of the IceCube Neutrino Observatory

The IceCube Neutrino Observatory is a successful and large scientific facility located near the Amundsen-Scott [...]