68 research outputs found
BAIKAL experiment: status report
We review the present status of the Baikal Neutrino Project and present the
results obtained with the deep underwater neutrino telescope NT-200.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. Presented at TAUP 2001 (7th international
workshop on Topics in Astroparticle and Underground Physics), Sep. 2001,
Laboratori Nazionali del Gran Sasso, Assergi, Ital
Baikal-GVD: status and prospects
Baikal-GVD is a next generation, kilometer-scale neutrino telescope under
construction in Lake Baikal. It is designed to detect astrophysical neutrino
fluxes at energies from a few TeV up to 100 PeV. GVD is formed by multi-megaton
subarrays (clusters). The array construction started in 2015 by deployment of a
reduced-size demonstration cluster named "Dubna". The first cluster in its
baseline configuration was deployed in 2016, the second in 2017 and the third
in 2018. The full scale GVD will be an array of ~10000 light sensors with an
instrumented volume of about 2 cubic km. The first phase (GVD-1) is planned to
be completed by 2020-2021. It will comprise 8 clusters with 2304 light sensors
in total. We describe the design of Baikal-GVD and present selected results
obtained in 2015-2017.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures. Conference proceedings for QUARKS201
Simultaneous measurements of water optical properties by AC9 transmissometer and ASP-15 Inherent Optical Properties meter in Lake Baikal
Measurements of optical properties in media enclosing Cherenkov neutrino
telescopes are important not only at the moment of the selection of an adequate
site, but also for the continuous characterization of the medium as a function
of time. Over the two last decades, the Baikal collaboration has been measuring
the optical properties of the deep water in Lake Baikal (Siberia) where, since
April 1998, the neutrino telescope NT-200 is in operation. Measurements have
been made with custom devices. The NEMO Collaboration, aiming at the
construction of a km3 Cherenkov neutrino detector in the Mediterranean Sea, has
developed an experimental setup for the measurement of oceanographic and
optical properties of deep sea water. This setup is based on a commercial
transmissometer. During a joint campaign of the two collaborations in March and
April 2001, light absorption, scattering and attenuation in water have been
measured. The results are compatible with previous ones reported by the Baikal
Collaboration and show convincing agreement between the two experimental
techniques.Comment: 16 pages, submitted to NIM-
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