Interactions News Wire #10-05
15 February 2005 http://www.interactions.org
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Source: Berkeley Lab
Content: Press Release
Date Issued: 15 February 2005
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Lynn Yarris (510) 486-5375
lcyarris@lbl.gov
A Web version of this press release with images and links to additional
information can be viewed at
http://www.lbl.gov/Science-Articles/Archive/NSD-IceCube.html
NEW NEUTRINO TELESCOPE FOR SOUTH POLE
BERKELEY, CA -- Construction is now underway for a most unusual
telescope, one whose light collecting "mirror" will be buried more than
a mile beneath the South Pole ice cap. Dubbed IceCube, because its array
of detectors covers a cubic kilometer of ice, this telescope is designed
not to capture starlight, but to study the high-energy variety of the
ghostlike subatomic particles known as neutrinos.
Originating from the Milky Way and beyond, and traveling to Earth
virtually unobstructed, high-energy neutrinos serve as windows back
through time, and should provide new insight into questions about the
nature of dark matter, the origin of cosmic rays, and other cosmic issues.
IceCube is an international collaborative effort made up of more than
150 scientists, engineers and computer scientists, from 26 institutions
in the United States, Europe, Japan and New Zealand. The principle
investigator for the project is Francis Halzen, a University of
Wisconsin-Madison professor of physics, and the collaborating institutes
includes the U.S. Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National
Laboratory (Berkeley Lab).
Berkeley Lab researchers were responsible for the unique electronics
package inside the digital optical modules (DOMs) that will enable
IceCube to pick out the rare signal of a high-energy neutrino colliding
with a molecule of water. A DOM consists of a pressurized glass sphere,
the size of a basketball, that houses an optical sensor, called a
photomultiplier tube, which can detect photons and convert them into
electronic signals that scientists can analyze.
"Each of these DOMs is like a mini-computer server that you can log onto
and download data from, or upload software to," says Robert Stokstad, of
Berkeley Lab's Nuclear Science Division (NSD), who heads the Institute
for Nuclear and Particle Astrophysics (INPA) and is the leader of
Berkeley Lab's IceCube effort.
Equipped with on-board control, processing and communications hardware
and software, and connected in long strings of 60 each via an electrical
cable, the DOMs can detect neutrinos with energies ranging from 200
billion to one quadrillion (1015 ) or more electron volts. In the past
few weeks, the first IceCube cable, with its 60 DOMs, was lowered down
into a hole drilled through the Antarctic ice using jets of hot water.
Plans call for a total of 4,200 DOMS to be put in place over the next
five years. The Antarctic summer season, during which the weather is
"mild" enough for work on IceCube to proceed, lasts only from
mid-October to mid-February. After that, winter sets in and the climate
is much too harsh for any outdoor work to be done.
When completed, IceCube's total volume of detectors will be about 20
times greater than that of its predecessor, another South Pole high
energy neutrino telescope called AMANDA, for Antarctic Muon And Neutrino
Detector Array, which has 680 optical sensors.
"The South Pole might seem like an unusual place to build neutrino
telescopes, but the Antarctic ice is very clear and very stable, and has
relatively low background radiation levels," says NSD astrophysicist
Spencer Klein, who heads the physics analysis team for Berkeley Lab's
IceCube effort.
Neutrinos are one of the most common and mysterious particles in the
universe. Produced by the decay of radioactive elements and certain
elementary particles, they carry no electrical charge and scarcely a
hint of mass, which means they are unaffected by magnetic fields and
rarely interact with other forms of matter. Able to escape from anything
other than a black hole, their pathway to earth is essentially a
straight line from their point of origin. Because these neutrinos are
the only known particles able to pass through Earth untouched,
scientists can point telescopes like IceCube and AMANDA to the northern
skies and use the planet to filter out every type of particle but neutrinos.
While there are extensive on-going studies of the neutrinos emitted out
of thermonuclear reactions in the core of the sun, as well as
antineutrinos from nuclear reactors, IceCube is designed to study the
neutrinos spawned in the most violent of astrophysical events, i.e.,
supernovas, gamma-ray bursts and cataclysmic phenomena involving black
holes and neutron stars. In studying these high-energy neutrinos,
scientists hope to be able to produce a map of the neutrino sky.
In addition, IceCube can be used to search for neutrinos produced by the
annihilation of weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPs) that have
been captured in the gravitational fields of the earth or the sun. This
research should shed new light on the nature of dark matter. Scientific
measurements of the mass of the galaxies we observe suggest that
90-percent of our universe is made up of a "dark" form of matter that we
cannot see. WIMPS have been proposed as constituents of dark matter.
"IceCube will also search for oddball hypothesized particles like
magnetic monopoles and Q-balls," says Klein. "Because of IceCube's huge
sensitive area, the search limits for such particles will be extended
more than an order of magnitude below existing experiments."
Trillions of neutrinos pass through each square centimeter of Earth's
surface every second without a trace of impact. However, every so often,
a neutrino does collide with an atom. This rare collision generates a
muon, a heavy electron-like subatomic particle that, as it passes
through ice or water, emits flashes of blueish light called C*h*erenkov
radiation. IceCube's DOMs can detect this light and scientists, by
measuring the intensity and arrival time of the light at multiple DOMs,
can reconstruct the directional path of the muon and determine the type,
direction, and energy of the neutrino that helped create it. This is
critical for separating a muon generated by a cosmic neutrino from the
millions more muons generated by cosmic rays in the atmosphere.
Says Stokstad, "Each DOM begins collecting data when it detects a single
photon. Data are collected with a custom waveform-digitizer chip and the
photomultiplier tube waveform is sampled 128 times at 300 megasamples
per second. Adjacent DOMs can communicate via local-coincidence cables,
allowing for the possibility of coincidence triggers."
On the surface of the ice, located where the IceCube detectors emerge
from the frozen depths, there is another
array of detectors called IceTop. This past season, eight of the 160
tanks that will make up the completed IceTop were installed. Each tank
is about two meters in diameter and will hold two IceCube DOMs frozen in
water. A pair of tanks will be connected to each IceCube cable. IceTop
will be used to calibrate IceCube and to study high-energy cosmic rays.
"For practical reasons, it was important that the DOMs be built around
an integrated circuit that could give us fast sampling times (pulses on
a nanosecond timescale) with low power demands," says Azriel
Goldschmidt, another NSD astrophysicist who has been working on DOM data
analysis. "Each DOM runs on only about five watts of power."
The DOM integrated circuit was custom made at Berkeley Lab based on
architecture developed by Stuart Kleinfelder, formerly of the
Engineering Division, now at UC Irvine. More than 30 Berkeley Lab
scientists and engineers are involved in the IceCube project. Project
leaders, in addition to Stokstad, Klein and Goldschmidt, include William
Edwards, of the Engineering Division, who is the project manager, and
David Nygren, of the Physics Division, one of the world's foremost
experts in particle detection.
Says Klein, "One of the most exciting things about IceCube is that we
just don't know what we will find. When you open up a new window into
the universe, you open up the possibility of entirely new discoveries."
Construction of IceCube is projected to cost $272 million. The National
Science Foundation will provide $242 million for the project, and an
additional $30 million will come from foreign partners.
Berkeley Lab is a U.S. Department of
Energy national laboratory located in Berkeley, California. It conducts
unclassified scientific research and is managed by the University of California.
Visit our Website at
www.lbl.gov/
-30-
Robert
Stokstad can be reached for an interview at *(510)486-4451 *or by email at
RGStokstad@lbl.gov
Spencer Klein can be reached for an interview at (510)
486-5470 or by email at SRKlein@lbl.gov
For more
information about IceCube, visit the Website at http://icecube.wisc.edu/