5 research outputs found

    One-point fluctuation analysis of IceCube neutrino events outlines a significant unassociated isotropic component and constrains the Galactic contribution

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    The origins of the extraterrestrial neutrinos observed in IceCube have yet to be determined. In this study we perform a one-point fluctuation analysis of the six-year high-energy starting event shower data, with fixed non-Poissonian contributions from atmospheric, galactic and some extragalactic components, as well as an isotropic (and weakly non-Poissonian) template. In addition to the star-forming galaxies and blazars, our analysis suggests the presence of an additional isotropic component, not associated with any detected class of point sources, with best-fit intensity of (2.8 ± 0.2)×10−18(E/100  TeV)−2.7±0.5 cm−2 s−1 sr−1 GeV−1. For the first time, we also consider high-energy extrapolations of several phenomenological models for the diffuse galactic emission (tuned to both local cosmic-ray data and diffuse gamma-ray emission in the GeV–TeV domain). We demonstrate the potential of our framework in discriminating between different scenarios, with possible implications on the physics of cosmic-ray transport in the TeV–PeV range
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