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Recent Results from Searches for Astrophysical Neutrinos with the IceCube Neutrino Telescope

Recent Results from Searches for Astrophysical Neutrinos with the IceCube Neutrino Telescope. Alexander Kappes Seminar APC, Paris, June 14, 2013. Outline. The IceCube neutrino observatory Event reconstruction in IceCube Previous results from diffuse searches in muons and cascades

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Recent Results from Searches for Astrophysical Neutrinos with the IceCube Neutrino Telescope

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  1. Recent Results from Searchesfor Astrophysical Neutrinos with the IceCube Neutrino Telescope • Alexander Kappes • Seminar • APC, Paris, June 14, 2013

  2. Outline • The IceCube neutrino observatory • Event reconstruction in IceCube • Previous results from diffuse searches in muons and cascades • The two PeV events “Ernie” and “Bert” • Results from a follow-up search on the two PeV events Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  3. Cosmic-ray spectrum No one knows how the Universe looks like in neutrinos → expect many surprises ! 103 10-3 Flux (GeV-1 m-2 s-1 sr-1) 10-9 10-15 10-21 LHC (beam energy) 10-27 109 1012 1015 1018 1021 energy (eV) Mission of neutrino telescopes • Search for the sources of the cosmic rays (CRs) • What are the accelerators? • How do they work? • Search for diffuse neutrino fluxes • Is there a cosmogenic flux? (interaction of CRs with CMB) • Does the Galactic plane shine in neutrinos? • Are there extended structures? • What is the nature of Dark Matter? • Are there exotic particles in the Universe?(magnetic monopoles, Q-balls . . .) Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  4. Time & position of hits Light intensity Energy μ trajectory → ν trajectory Detection of cosmic neutrinos muon νμ ν-nucleon interaction (νμ + N → μ + X) Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  5. Current (planned) neutrino telescope projects Baikal (GVD) ANTARES (KM3NeT) IceCube Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  6. ~250 authors from 39 institutes in 10 countries Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  7. The IceCube Observatory -1450 m -2450 m Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  8. Neutrino signatures • Track-like: • Source: νμ CC interaction • Good angular resolution (< 1°) • Factor of 2 resolution in muon energy • Sensitive ≫ instrumented volume • Cascade-like: • Source: νe, νμ, ντ NC + νe CC interaction • Good energy resolution (≳ 10%) • Limited angular resolution ( ≳ 10° ) • Sensitive ≈ instrumented volume • Composites: • Source: ντ CC + νμ CC inside instrumented volume • Challenging to reconstruct muon (data) cascade (data) tau (simulation) Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  9. ice model Optical ice properties dust logger data • Photon propagation dominated by scatteringλeff.scat 5 − 100 mλabs 20 − 250 m • Ice below South Pole inhomogeneous (horizontal “dust layers”) • Calibration devices • Dust logger (8 holes across detector) • LED flashers (12 on each DOM) • In-ice calibration laser (2) • Uncertainty on ice properties ~10% IceCube, NIM A711 (2013) Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  10. Cascades: Energy reconstruction (EM showers) IceCube Preliminary plot shows statistical error only Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  11. time delay vs. direct light delayed “on time” Cascade: Directional reconstruction Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  12. best direction reversed direction number of photons hit time [μs] Cascades: Directional reconstruction IceCube Preliminary Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  13. Cascades: Directional reconstruction IceCube Preliminary resolution for an individual example event from re-simulation Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  14. c,(b) Waxman&Bahcall upper bound cosmic ray (p) astrophysical neutrinos prompt νμ, νe νe,μ e,μ prompt conventional νμ conventional νe π μ νμ e conventional νμ νe Background: Atmospheric spectrum • Prompt componentstill unmeasured • Is there a diffuse flux from unresolved cosmic sources? • Disentangling cosmic and prompt fluxes challenging Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  15. Signals and backgrounds • Signal (astrophysical) • Cascade dominated from full mixing(~80% per volume) • Expected to be high energy(typically E-2) • Mostly in southern sky due toEarth absorption • Background (atmospheric) • Track-like from atmospheric muonsand neutrinos • Soft spectrum(E-3.7 ‑ E-2.7) • Muons in southern and neutrinos in northern hemisphere Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  16. Observables of interest • Spectral slope: separate extraterrestrial fluxes from atmospheric,probe properties of source • Existence of a cutoff: maximum energy of source;(galactic ↔ extragalactic) • Flavor composition: discriminates against νμ dominated by background,probes physics of production process • Zenith distribution: comparison to backgrounds,probes source location (together with azimuth) Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  17. The high-energy tail from previoussearches in muons and cascades Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  18. Observed spectrum slightlyharder than predicted → Limit > sensitivity Models: AGN: Mannheim (1995) AGN: Mücke et al (2003) AGN: Stecker et al (2005) GRB: Waxman et al (1997) atmospheric neutrinos AMANDA ANTARES W&B bound Atmospheric muon neutrinos in IC59 • Non-significant excess (1.8σ) in high-energy tail found IC59 atm. ν cosmic ν (E-2) Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  19. +prompt ~220 TeV High-energy cascades in IC40 one event in test sample Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  20. IceCube Preliminary Cosmogenic neutrinos in IC79+IC86 • Aim: Simple search to look for extremely high-energy (109 GeV) neutrinos from proton interaction with CMB • Upgoing muons • always neutrinos • background: atmospheric neutrinos • high energy threshold (1 PeV) • Downgoing muons • atmospheric muon background • very high energy threshold (100 PeV) Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  21. arXiv:1304.5356, accepted by PRL Cosmogenic neutrinos in IC79+IC86 Aug. 9, 2011 ~1.0 PeV δ ≈ ‑28º “Bert” • Two very interesting events • Shown at Neutrino’12 • Both downgoing • Expected background: 0.082→ 2.8σ excess • What we had learned • At least two PeV neutrinos intwo-year dataset • Events are downgoing • Don’t seem to be cosmogenic • More than expected fromatmospheric background • Compatible with IC59 upper limit • Spectrum doesn’t seem to extend to much higher energies(unbroken E-2 would have produced 8‑9 more events above 1 PeV) Jan. 3, 2012 ~1.1 PeV δ ≈ ‑67º “Ernie” Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  22. Ernie Bert Things we wanted to learn • Isolated events or tail of spectrum? • Spectral slope/cutoff • Flavor composition (ratio tracks/cascades) • Where do they come from? • Astrophysical or air-shower physics (e.g. charm)? → Needed more statistics to answer all of these Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  23. Neutrino identification • How to identify neutrinos? • Upgoing (through-going) muon tracks • filter out atmospheric muons with bulk of Earth • unknown vertex → hard to measure energy • Excess over background (all directions) • works only for extremely bright/high-energy neutrinos • Contained vertex • filter out atmospheric muons using outer detector layer for anti-coincidence • neutrino vertex observed → good energy estimation Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  24. μ νμ Veto μ Follow-up analysis on the two PeV events ✘ ✓ Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  25. Q/pe Q/pe Q/pe μ νμ Q/pe (cumulative) ✗ Q/pe ✔ Q/pe Veto dQ/dt 250 250 2 2 2 3 3 0 3 1 0 0 1 1 2 2 3 3 Time/µs 0 0 1 1 Time/µs Time/µs Time/µs ✔ Requirement: Qveto-region (T<T250) < 3 p.e. → remaining events: 6±3.4 (preliminary) T250= time at which Q= 250 pe T250= time at which Q= 250 pe Background 1 - Atmospheric Muons Through-going muon Contained cascade Total detector Total detector dQ/dt Time/µs Veto region Veto region – barely contained cascade Veto region – well contained cascade Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  26. atmospheric neutrino spectra Background 2 ‑ Atmospheric neutrinos • Typically separated by energy • Very low at PeV energies (order of 0.1 events/year) • Large uncertainties in spectrum at high energies(normalization of prompt component) • 4.6+3.3‑1.2 events expected in two years (662 days)(preliminary) • Southern sky: atmospheric neutrinos vetoed by accompanying muons from same air shower !(effective above ~100 TeV) • Prompt baseline model: Enberg et al., PRD 78 (2008)(updated with cosmic-ray “Knee” model) Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  27. Effective area / volumes • Effective Area • Differences at low energies dueto constant charge threshold Q • Peak at 6.3 PeV due to Glashowresonance (only νe) • Effective volume • Fully efficient above 100 TeV for CC electron neutrinos • About 400 Mton effective target mass Effective area Effective volume Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  28. Results from follow-up search Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  29. Results of contained vertex event search Combined 4.1σ (preliminary) Track events (×) can have much higher neutrino energies(also true on smaller scale for CC events except νe) Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  30. Event distribution in detector: Vertex position • Uniform in fiducial volume(atmospheric muons would pile up at detector boundary) Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  31. Event distribution in detector: Directions (x vs. z) IceCube Preliminary Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  32. Event distribution in detector: Directions (y vs. z) IceCube Preliminary Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  33. Some example events IceCube Preliminary IceCube Preliminary IceCube Preliminary declination: -13.2° deposited energy: 82TeV declination: -0.4° deposited energy: 71TeV declination: 40.3° deposited energy: 253TeV Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  34. Tracks • Good angular resolution (<1º) • Inherently worse resolution on energy due to leaving muon • Cascades • Larger uncertainties on angle (about 10°-15°) • Good resolution on deposited energy(might not be total energy for NC and ντ) IceCube Preliminary IceCube Preliminary Event Reconstruction Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  35. IceCube Preliminary zenith: 9° RMS energy: 10% RMS Outliers included in systematic errors Systematic studies and cross-checks • Systematics were checked using an extensive per-event re-simulation(analysis repeated with ice model and energy scale varied within uncertainties) • Second fit method based on continuous re-simulation of events • can include ice systematics in fit !(anisotropy in scattering angle, tilted dust layers) • very slow • Comparison to standard method: all results compatible to within 10% Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  36. Distribution of deposited energy • Harder than expected fromatmospheric background • Merges well into expected backgrounds at low energies • Potential cutoff at 1.6+1.5‑0.4 PeV Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  37. Zenith distribution • Excess compatible with isotropic flux • Events from northern hemisphere absorbed in Earth • Minor excess in southern hemisphere but not significant Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  38. Significance skymap • Test of 28 events vs. uniform distribution in right ascension • Likelihood analysis using full-sky reconstruction Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  39. muon bkg. estimated from data What have we found? • Events seem to be neutrinos • Energy spectrum very hard, but with cutoff • Flavor distribution consistent with ( 1 : 1 : 1 ) • Angular distribution disfavorsatmospheric explanation(air showers missing) • Compatible with isotropic flux • No evidence for clustering Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  40. Conclusions • Two 1 PeV neutrinos observed at threshold of search for cosmogenic neutrinos (significance 2.8σ) • Follow-up analysis reveals 26 more events at lower energies(preliminary significance 3.3σ) • Increasing evidence for high-energy component beyond atmospheric spectrum • inconsistent with standard atmospheric backgrounds at 4.1σ (preliminary) • neutrinos from charm decay an uncertainty factor but unlikely to explain PeV events • Less clear what it actually is . . . • compatible with isotropic astrophysical flux with PeV cutoff • no clustering • Publication in preparation • More data coming soon (one more year of data already waiting on disk) Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  41. Backup Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  42. Pointing accuracy • No neutrino reference point-source to validate absolute pointing • Use lack of atmospheric muons from Moon direction (point-sink) • Moon diameter 0.5° • Angular muon resolution < 1° • Observed in IC59 with > 12σ • Pointing accuracy < 0.2° IceCube 59 strings Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  43. Scattering length compared to dust logger data Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  44. Tilt of dust layers Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 |

  45. Directional Resolution for Showers IceCube Preliminary plot shows statistical error only Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 | IceCube Preliminary

  46. Estimating Muon Background From Data Veto Tagging Region • Add one layer of DOMs on the outside to tag known background events • Then use these events to evaluate the veto efficiency • Avoids systematics from simulation assumptions/models! • Can be validated at charges below our cut (6000 p.e.) where background dominates μ Alexander Kappes | Seminar, APC, Paris | 14.06.2013 | IceCube Preliminary

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