The IceCube Neutrino Observatory has detected a "high-energy neutrino emission from within the Milky Way," according to AAAS. Credit: IceCube Collaboration/Science Communication Lab for SFB 1491 ...
About a trillion tiny particles called neutrinos pass through you every second. Created during the Big Bang, these “relic” neutrinos exist throughout the entire universe, but they can’t harm you. In ...
The South Pole IceCube Neutrino Observatory – the biggest and strangest telescope in the world – has detected the first neutrino emissions from within the Milky Way, an achievement that will shape how ...
IceCube sits on tons of clear ice, allowing scientists to make out neutrino interactions. Cmichel67/Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA About a trillion tiny particles called neutrinos pass through you every ...
The IceCube Neutrino Observatory first detected evidence of neutrinos originating from outside the Milky Way a decade ago. Benjamin Eberhardt, IceCube / NSF About a mile below the icy surface of the ...
The IceCube Neutrino Observatory, a particle detector buried in the Antarctic ice, is a demonstration of the power of the human passion for discovery, where scientific ingenuity meets technological ...
Every second, about 100 trillion neutrinos pass through your body unnoticed. At the South Pole, the National Science Foundation-funded IceCube Neutrino Observatory uses a kilometer-wide array of ...
An artist's composite image of a photo of the above-ground portion of the IceCube Neutrino Observatory along with the first-ever neutrino-based image of the Milky Way. The detected neutrinos, depicted ...
New results from a neutrino telescope and a gravitational-wave observatory show how astronomers use different forms of messengers to study the cosmos. Naoko Kurahashi Neilson was on a Zoom call when ...
Astrophysicists have long predicted that the Milky Way is a source of ghostly particles called neutrinos, but haven’t been able to detect them. Until now. In a new study led by researchers at the ...
An artist’s composition of the Milky Way seen with a neutrino lens (blue). Astronomers are hailing a “new lens” they can use to observe the universe after the publishing of this new image (above) of ...