This rare event offers a unique opportunity to explore the universe, including probing the fundamental properties of the cosmos.
A “ghost particle” discovered by a detector in the Mediterranean carried 30 times more energy than any neutrino observed to ...
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.
Neutrinos are very mysterious particles,” says Damien Dornic, one of the co-authors of a new paper published February 12 in ...
Scientists have detected the most energetic neutrino ever observed using a deep-sea telescope. The discovery could provide ...
A neutrino detector submerged in the Mediterranean Sea has sniffed out the most energetic ghost particle yet, scientists ...
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Hosted 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 ...
Although still under construction, the sea-floor KM3NeT detector spotted a neutrino 20 times more powerful than any ...
The team announced its “ultrahigh energy” neutrino on Wednesday, in a paper published in the journal Nature. The finding ...
Using an observatory under construction deep beneath the Mediterranean Sea near Sicily, scientists have detected a ghostly ...
Neutrinos are sometimes called “ghost particles,” because they are nearly weightless, rarely interact with any other matter, ...
Using an observatory located deep beneath the Mediterranean Sea, an international team has detected an ultra-high-energy ...
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