This rare event offers a unique opportunity to explore the universe, including probing the fundamental properties of the cosmos.
A deep-sea detector glimpsed a particle with 220 million billion electron volts of energy — around 20 times as energetic as any neutrino seen before.
PeV — has been detected by the underwater KM3NeT telescope, marking a pivotal moment in astrophysics. This tiny but powerful ...
Scientists have detected the most energetic neutrino ever observed using a deep-sea telescope. The discovery could provide ...
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New Scientist on MSNHow big is a neutrino? We're finally starting to get an answerOur estimates of the size of a neutrino span from smaller than an atomic nucleus to as large as a few metres, but now we are ...
Neutrinos are very mysterious particles,” says Damien Dornic, one of the co-authors of a new paper published February 12 in ...
A neutrino detector submerged in the Mediterranean Sea has sniffed out the most energetic ghost particle yet, scientists ...
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Hosted on MSNMost energetic neutrino ever found on Earth detected at the bottom of the Mediterranean SeaPhysicists have detected the highest-energy 'ghost particle' ever felt on Earth, with nearly 100 times more energy than any ...
A “ghost particle” discovered by a detector in the Mediterranean carried 30 times more energy than any neutrino observed to ...
The team announced its “ultrahigh energy” neutrino on Wednesday, in a paper published in the journal Nature. The finding ...
Although still under construction, the sea-floor KM3NeT detector spotted a neutrino 20 times more powerful than any ...
Using an observatory under construction deep beneath the Mediterranean Sea near Sicily, scientists have detected a ghostly ...
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