Physical Society Colloquium
The Pacific Ocean Neutrino Experiment
Department of Physics Simon Fraser University
Every time researchers have pushed the energy boundary in particle physics we
have found something new about our Universe. Recently, IceCube has demonstrated
that Neutrino Telescopes can use neutrinos from the cosmos as excellent tools
to continue this exploration. The true potential of this field, however,
remains to be realized due to limited observations of neutrinos at the highest
energies. To unlock this potential, advanced detectors are needed that will
push the forefront of the cosmic frontier, revealing new knowledge of extreme
astrophysical phenomena, including through multi-messenger follow-up programs,
and testing fundamental physics at scales well beyond those reachable by
Earth-bound accelerators. The Pacific Ocean Neutrino Experiment (P-ONE)
is an initiative to construct one of the largest neutrino telescopes deep
in the northern Pacific Ocean off the coast of British Columbia. We aim to
deploy the first detector line in 2025 - marking the start of an exciting
phase for this new project. In this talk I will cover results from early
pathfinder missions and discuss the status of P-ONE.
Friday, March 15th 2024, 15:30
Ernest Rutherford Physics Building, Keys Auditorium (room 112)
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