Recent Ultra High Energy neutrino bounds and multimessenger observations with the Pierre Auger Observatory

The overall picture of the highest energy particles produced in the Universe is changing because of measurements made with the Pierre Auger Observatory. Composition studies of cosmic rays point towards an unexpected mixed composition of intermediate mass nuclei, more isotropic than anticipated, whic...

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Main Author: Zas Enrique
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2017-01-01
Series:EPJ Web of Conferences
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1051/epjconf/201716501057
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spelling doaj-7b314cffc003478f9cd1bfede0fdcc592021-08-02T09:34:27ZengEDP SciencesEPJ Web of Conferences2100-014X2017-01-011650105710.1051/epjconf/201716501057epjconf_npa82017_01057Recent Ultra High Energy neutrino bounds and multimessenger observations with the Pierre Auger ObservatoryZas EnriqueThe overall picture of the highest energy particles produced in the Universe is changing because of measurements made with the Pierre Auger Observatory. Composition studies of cosmic rays point towards an unexpected mixed composition of intermediate mass nuclei, more isotropic than anticipated, which is reshaping the future of the field and underlining the priority to understand composition at the highest energies. The Observatory is competitive in the search for neutrinos of all flavors above about 100 PeV by looking for very inclined showers produced deep in the atmosphere by neutrinos interacting either in the atmosphere or in the Earth’s crust. It covers a large field of view between −85◦ and 60◦ declination in equatorial coordinates. Neutrinos are expected because of the existence of ultra high energy cosmic rays. They provide valuable complementary information, their fluxes being sensitive to the primary cosmic ray masses and their directions reflecting the source positions. We report the results of the neutrino search providing competitive bounds to neutrino production and strong constraints to a number of production models including cosmogenic neutrinos due to ultra high energy protons. We also report on two recent contributions of the Observatory to multimessenger studies by searching for correlations of neutrinos both with cosmic rays and with gravitational waves. The correlations of the directions of the highest energy astrophysical neutrinos discovered with IceCube with the highest energy cosmic rays detected with the Auger Observatory and the Telescope Array revealed an excess that is not statistically significant and is being monitored. The targeted search for neutrinos correlated with the discovery of the gravitational wave events GW150914 and GW151226 with advanced LIGO has led to the first bounds on the energy emitted by black hole mergers in Ultra-High Energy Neutrinos.https://doi.org/10.1051/epjconf/201716501057
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zas Enrique
spellingShingle Zas Enrique
Recent Ultra High Energy neutrino bounds and multimessenger observations with the Pierre Auger Observatory
EPJ Web of Conferences
author_facet Zas Enrique
author_sort Zas Enrique
title Recent Ultra High Energy neutrino bounds and multimessenger observations with the Pierre Auger Observatory
title_short Recent Ultra High Energy neutrino bounds and multimessenger observations with the Pierre Auger Observatory
title_full Recent Ultra High Energy neutrino bounds and multimessenger observations with the Pierre Auger Observatory
title_fullStr Recent Ultra High Energy neutrino bounds and multimessenger observations with the Pierre Auger Observatory
title_full_unstemmed Recent Ultra High Energy neutrino bounds and multimessenger observations with the Pierre Auger Observatory
title_sort recent ultra high energy neutrino bounds and multimessenger observations with the pierre auger observatory
publisher EDP Sciences
series EPJ Web of Conferences
issn 2100-014X
publishDate 2017-01-01
description The overall picture of the highest energy particles produced in the Universe is changing because of measurements made with the Pierre Auger Observatory. Composition studies of cosmic rays point towards an unexpected mixed composition of intermediate mass nuclei, more isotropic than anticipated, which is reshaping the future of the field and underlining the priority to understand composition at the highest energies. The Observatory is competitive in the search for neutrinos of all flavors above about 100 PeV by looking for very inclined showers produced deep in the atmosphere by neutrinos interacting either in the atmosphere or in the Earth’s crust. It covers a large field of view between −85◦ and 60◦ declination in equatorial coordinates. Neutrinos are expected because of the existence of ultra high energy cosmic rays. They provide valuable complementary information, their fluxes being sensitive to the primary cosmic ray masses and their directions reflecting the source positions. We report the results of the neutrino search providing competitive bounds to neutrino production and strong constraints to a number of production models including cosmogenic neutrinos due to ultra high energy protons. We also report on two recent contributions of the Observatory to multimessenger studies by searching for correlations of neutrinos both with cosmic rays and with gravitational waves. The correlations of the directions of the highest energy astrophysical neutrinos discovered with IceCube with the highest energy cosmic rays detected with the Auger Observatory and the Telescope Array revealed an excess that is not statistically significant and is being monitored. The targeted search for neutrinos correlated with the discovery of the gravitational wave events GW150914 and GW151226 with advanced LIGO has led to the first bounds on the energy emitted by black hole mergers in Ultra-High Energy Neutrinos.
url https://doi.org/10.1051/epjconf/201716501057
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