47 research outputs found
The IceCube Neutrino Observatory Part VI: Ice Properties, Reconstruction and Future Developments
Papers on ice properties, reconstruction and future developments submitted to
the 33nd International Cosmic Ray Conference (Rio de Janeiro 2013) by the
IceCube Collaboration.Comment: 28 pages, 38 figures; Papers submitted to the 33nd International
Cosmic Ray Conference, Rio de Janeiro 2013; version 2 corrects errors in the
author lis
Observation of the cosmic-ray shadow of the Moon with IceCube
We report on the observation of a significant deficit of cosmic rays from the direction of the Moon with the IceCube detector. The study of this âMoon shadowâ is used to characterize the angular resolution and absolute pointing capabilities of the detector. The detection is based on data taken in two periods before the completion of the detector: between April 2008 and May 2009, when IceCube operated in a partial configuration with 40 detector strings deployed in the South Pole ice, and between May 2009 and May 2010 when the detector operated with 59 strings. Using two independent analysis methods, the Moon shadow has been observed to high significance (>6Ï) in both detector configurations. The observed location of the shadow center is within 0.2° of its expected position when geomagnetic deflection effects are taken into account. This measurement validates the directional reconstruction capabilities of IceCube
Measurement of the cosmic ray energy spectrum with IceTop-73
We report on the measurement of the all-particle cosmic ray energy spectrum with the IceTop air shower array in the energy range from 1.58 PeV to 1.26 EeV. The IceTop air shower array is the surface component of the IceCube Neutrino Observatory at the geographical South Pole. The analysis was performed using only information from IceTop. The data used in this work were taken from June 1, 2010 to May 13, 2011. During that period the IceTop array consisted of 73 stations, compared to 81 in its final configuration. The measured spectrum exhibits a clear deviation from a single power law above the knee around 4 PeV and below 1 EeV. We observe spectral hardening around 18 PeV and steepening around 130 PeV.M. G. Aartsen ... G. C. Hill ... et al. (IceCube Collaboration
Measurement of atmospheric neutrino oscillations with IceCube
We present the first statistically significant detection of neutrino oscillations in the high-energy regime (>20 GeV) from an analysis of IceCube Neutrino Observatory data collected in 2010 and 2011. This measurement is made possible by the low-energy threshold of the DeepCore detector (~20 GeV) and benefits from the use of the IceCube detector as a veto against cosmic-ray-induced muon background. The oscillation signal was detected within a low-energy muon neutrino sample (20-100 GeV) extracted from data collected by DeepCore. A high-energy muon neutrino sample (100 GeV-10 TeV) was extracted from IceCube data to constrain systematic uncertainties. The disappearance of low-energy upward-going muon neutrinos was observed, and the nonoscillation hypothesis is rejected with more than 5Ï significance. In a two-neutrino flavor formalism, our data are best described by the atmospheric neutrino oscillation parameters |Îm(32)(2)|=(2.3(-0.5)(+0.6))Ă10(-3) eV(2) and sin(2)(2Ξ(23))>0.93, and maximum mixing is favored.M. G. Aartsen ... G. C. Hill ... et al. (IceCube Collaboration
The IceCube Neutrino Observatory Part III: Cosmic Rays
Papers on cosmic rays submitted to the 33nd International Cosmic Ray
Conference (Rio de Janeiro 2013) by the IceCube Collaboration
Recommended from our members
The IceCube Neutrino Observatory Part I: Point Source Searches
Papers on point source searches submitted to the 33nd International Cosmic
Ray Conference (Rio de Janeiro 2013) by the IceCube Collaboration
Recommended from our members
The IceCube Neutrino Observatory Part VI: Ice Properties, Reconstruction and Future Developments
Papers on ice properties, reconstruction and future developments submitted to
the 33nd International Cosmic Ray Conference (Rio de Janeiro 2013) by the
IceCube Collaboration
Recommended from our members
The IceCube Neutrino Observatory Part II: Atmospheric and Diffuse UHE Neutrino Searches of All Flavors
Papers on atmospheric and diffuse UHE neutrino searches of all flavors
submitted to the 33nd International Cosmic Ray Conference (Rio de Janeiro 2013)
by the IceCube Collaboration