A Cockcroft-Walton HV system for 31 PMTs in a hybrid DOM delivers stable baseline, uniform gain, and sub-1.8 ns timing performance suitable for deep-sea neutrino detection.
IceCube: An Instrument for Neutrino Astronomy
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abstract
Neutrino astronomy beyond the Sun was first imagined in the late 1950s; by the 1970s, it was realized that kilometer-scale neutrino detectors were required. The first such instrument, IceCube, is near completion and taking data. The IceCube project transforms a cubic kilometer of deep and ultra-transparent Antarctic ice into a particle detector. A total of 5,160 optical sensors are embedded into a gigaton of Antarctic ice to detect the Cherenkov light emitted by secondary particles produced when neutrinos interact with nuclei in the ice. Each optical sensor is a complete data acquisition system, including a phototube, digitization electronics, control and trigger systems and LEDs for calibration. The light patterns reveal the type (flavor) of neutrino interaction and the energy and direction of the neutrino, making neutrino astronomy possible. The scientific missions of IceCube include such varied tasks as the search for sources of cosmic rays, the observation of Galactic supernova explosions, the search for dark matter, and the study of the neutrinos themselves. These reach energies well beyond those produced with accelerator beams. The outline of this review is as follows: Neutrino Astronomy and Kilometer-Scale Detectors. High-Energy Neutrino Telescopes: Methodologies of Neutrino Detection. IceCube Hardware. High-Energy Neutrino Telescopes: Beyond Astronomy. Future Projects
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hep-ex 1years
2025 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
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Design and Evaluation of a PMT High-Voltage system for Deepsea Neutrino Telescope
A Cockcroft-Walton HV system for 31 PMTs in a hybrid DOM delivers stable baseline, uniform gain, and sub-1.8 ns timing performance suitable for deep-sea neutrino detection.