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Detecting Low-Energy Astrophysical Neutrinos with KM3NeT/ORCA: the Transient Neutrino Sky at the GeV Scale

Description du projet

Stimuler la recherche sur les sursauts de neutrinos de basse énergie

La détection des ondes gravitationnelles de la collision de deux étoiles à neutrons le 17 août 2017 par la collaboration LIGO-Virgo a inauguré une nouvelle ère dans l’astronomie multi-messagers. Financé par le programme Actions Marie Skłodowska-Curie, le projet LEANOR vise à faire les prochaines observations de signaux messagers disparates en couplant des neutrinos de basse énergie (GeV) avec des ondes électromagnétiques et gravitationnelles émises lors de courts sursauts gamma. Comparés à leurs homologues de plus haute énergie, les neutrinos de basse énergie sont plus abondants et pourraient grandement aider à identifier de nouvelles sources cosmiques. Pour atteindre cet objectif, le projet prévoit de convertir le détecteur ORCA, hébergé dans l’infrastructure de recherche KM3NeT et initialement conçu pour les études d’oscillation des neutrinos, en un télescope permettant d’étudier les neutrinos astrophysiques GeV.

Objectif

"The era of Multi-Messenger (MM) astronomy has started with the joint observations of gravitational and electromagnetic waves in August 2017, and the announcement of a common source of high-energy neutrinos and gamma rays in July 2018. The ""Low-Energy Astrophysical Neutrinos in ORca"" (LEANOR) project aspires to be the next MM observation, coupling low-energy (GeV) neutrinos with electromagnetic and gravitational waves emitted during short gamma-ray bursts (SGRBs). While the signal/background differentiation is more challenging for low energy neutrinos, they have the advantage to be more abundant than their high-energy counterpart. Produced as a consequence of the accelerated proton flux colliding with the matter surrounding the source, they stand as promising messengers to constrain the local environment and would furthermore be of great help to identify new cosmic sources.
To reach this goal, we propose to convert the KM3NeT-ORCA detector, initially designed for neutrino oscillation studies, into a telescope able to study astrophysical GeV neutrinos. A detailed study of the environmental noise will be coupled to a specific selection of ORCA data targeting GeV neutrino interactions. The data sample acquired will then be used to search for statistically significant excess of neutrinos during SGRBs. Three different analyses, based on electromagnetic or gravitational wave observations, will be developed. These analyses will allow to constrain the source environment as well as the hadronic acceleration process taking place in SGRBs.
The project will lead to either the first joint observation of GeV neutrinos, electromagnetic and gravitational waves, or the first observational limits set in this energy range for the studied source population. Opening a new line of research in ORCA, LEANOR will also provide the KM3NeT collaboration with new tools to develop a variety of searches for low energy neutrinos emitted during transient events, such as Novae or Fast radio bursts."

Régime de financement

MSCA-IF-EF-ST - Standard EF

Coordinateur

UNIVERSITE PARIS CITE
Contribution nette de l'UE
€ 184 707,84
Adresse
85 BD SAINT GERMAIN
75006 Paris
France

Voir sur la carte

Région
Ile-de-France Ile-de-France Paris
Type d’activité
Higher or Secondary Education Establishments
Liens
Coût total
€ 184 707,84