15–17 Jun 2022
Europe/Stockholm timezone

Latest Results from the IceCube Neutrino Observatory

17 Jun 2022, 09:15
15m
Parallel session: partikelsektionen Sektionen för elementarpartikel och astropartikelfysik

Speaker

Chad Finley (Stockholm University / OKC)

Description

The IceCube Neutrino Observatory, built into a cubic kilometer of ice at
the South Pole, was completed in 2010 and has been in continuous
operation since then. Discovering the diffuse astrophysical neutrino
flux in 2013, and pinpointing the first high-energy neutrino sources
starting in 2018, IceCube has inaugurated the era of neutrino
astronomy. Progress has been not only incremental but occasionally
revolutionary, a result of large advances in computing that could not
have been foreseen when the detector was built. Such advances include
the detailed modeling of photon propagation in the glacial ice, and the
application of Deep Learning to event selection and reconstruction. In
this talk, I will review some of the latest results from IceCube, with
an eye toward where such innovations have had a large impact.

Primary author

Chad Finley (Stockholm University / OKC)

Presentation materials