17–24 Jul 2024
Prague
Europe/Prague timezone

The Radio Neutrino Observatory in Greenland: Status and Perspectives

18 Jul 2024, 09:05
15m
South Hall 2B

South Hall 2B

Parallel session talk 08. Astro-particle Physics and Cosmology Astro-particle Physics and Cosmology

Speaker

Philipp Windischhofer (University of Chicago (US))

Description

High-energy neutrinos propagating over cosmological distances are the ideal messenger particles for astrophysical phenomena, but the neutrino landscape above 10 PeV is currently completely uncharted. At these extreme energies and the frugal flux expected, the dominant experimental strategy is to detect radiofrequency emissions from particle cascades produced by neutrinos interacting in the vast polar ice sheets.

The Radio Neutrino Observatory in Greenland (RNO-G) is an array of radio antennas embedded in the ice near Summit Station, currently being deployed. At completion, RNO-G will consist of 35 autonomous antenna stations interspaced by 1.25 km on a rectangular grid, making it the largest and most sensitive in-ice neutrino telescope with unique access to the northern sky.

In this talk, I will describe the design of RNO-G, outline calibration and analysis strategies developed on the way to first physics, and share a look at the data collected by the first seven operating stations.

Alternate track 02. Neutrino Physics
I read the instructions above Yes

Author

Philipp Windischhofer (University of Chicago (US))

Presentation materials