DISCOVER Vol. 22 No. 5 (May 2001)
Ice Fishing for Neutrinos Deep inside a glacier at the south pole, the world's most unconventional telescope is facilitating a new kind of astronomy based not on light but on neutrinos, ghostly particles that emerge from the hearts of supernovas and quasars. The Antarctic Muon and Neutrino Detector Array--AMANDA for short--has no mirror, no eyepiece, and no dome. Instead, it consists of about 700 bowling-ball-sized glass sensors that pick up the faint blue flashes given off when neutrinos collide with atoms more than a mile down in the Antarctic ice.
High-energy neutrinos emerge from some of the most violent phenomena in the universe, including supernovas, quasars, and other types of active galaxies. Because neutrinos barely interact with matter, they reach Earth still carrying unadulterated information about the cosmic events that produced them. Photons of visible light, in contrast, can get absorbed, obscured, and altered by intervening matter on its way to Earth. "Photons are very gregarious. They interact with everything. Only neutrinos can bring us unvarnished information," says Robert Morse, Halzen's colleague at Wisconsin and AMANDA's project leader. Just finding neutrinos is not good enough--it's the rare, very energetic ones that Morse and Halzen are after. But Earth is constantly showered with a far greater abundance of low-energy neutrinos generated in the sun or created when cosmic rays strike atoms in the upper atmosphere. Scientists have built giant underground water tanks to detect these solar neutrinos. Even the largest of these neutrino observatories--the 12.5-million-gallon Super Kamiokande in Japan--is too small to catch the few high-energy neutrinos, however.
The primary task of the AMANDA sensors is to study this glow and track how the muons travel through the ice. All the downward-moving muons come from low-energy neutrinos created in the atmosphere above the south pole. The interesting ones will be those moving upward, which are mostly more energetic particles originating from the sun or from somewhere far beyond the solar system. The intensity of each blue flash reveals the energy of the neutrino that produced it. So far, AMANDA successfully detected and tracked the background of low-energy neutrinos from the sun. To pick up the long-sought high-energy particles from intergalactic space, Morse and his Wisconsin colleagues are adding 5,000 detectors to transform AMANDA into IceCube. At 3,000 feet in each dimension, IceCube will be the largest single scientific instrument ever built. Finding even a handful of neutrinos from quasars and their ilk could allow the first direct measurement of the massive, galaxy-shaping, star-swallowing black holes believed to lie at the center of these celestial bodies. "The hope is that a particle that is almost nothing may tell us everything about the universe," says Halzen. Posted 04/24/01
RELATED WEB SITES: See a graphic of how AMANDA works at http://www.news.wisc.edu/misc/amanda.html The AMANDA project page is http://amanda.berkeley.edu/amanda/amanda.html Halzen's Web site is http://phenom.physics.wisc.edu/~halzen/
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