McGill.CA / Science / Department of Physics

Particle and Astroparticle Physics Seminar

Trinity: An air shower imaging instrument to detect ultrahigh-energy neutrinos

Otte Nepomuk

Georgia Tech

The detection of neutrinos with IceCube has cracked open a new window in astrophysics at the TeV-PeV energy scale. The revelation of a relatively hard neutrino spectrum and the unknown origin of the flux are two motivations to extend neutrino measurements to even higher energies, the ultra-high energy (UHE) regime above 1e7 GeV. Another reason to build UHE neutrino detectors are cosmogenic neutrinos, which hold the key to the composition of UHE cosmic rays and their sources. Furthermore, by combining measurements from detectors that are sensitive to different neutrino flavors it will be possible to search for new fundamental particle physics beyond the standard model.

The seemingly preferred way to search for UHE neutrinos nowadays is with radio detectors employed in ice (e.g. ARA and ARIANNA), on balloons (ANITA), or by pointing antennas at mountainous terrain (GRAND). In this talk I show that imaging detectors, which are sensitive to the Cherenkov and fluorescence emission from neutrino induced particle showers in the atmosphere, are a viable and more cost-effective alternative UHE neutrino instruments if designed properly. In this talk, I present the design TRINITY; a system of six Cherenkov telescopes. I discuss the sensitivity of the system, how it can be built, and address operational constraints.

Wednesday, November 6th 2019, 15:30
Ernest Rutherford Physics Building, R.E. Bell Conference Room (room 103)