Unlocking the Potential of Tau Neutrino Astronomy with TAMBO

18 Jun 2024, 17:30
2h
Near Aula Magna (U6 building) (University of Milano-Bicocca)

Near Aula Magna (U6 building)

University of Milano-Bicocca

Piazza dell’Ateneo Nuovo 1, Milano, 20126
Poster Astrophysical neutrinos Poster session and reception 1

Speaker

Will Thompson (Harvard University)

Description

The detection of high-energy astrophysical neutrinos by IceCube has opened a new window on our Universe. While IceCube has measured the flux of these neutrinos at energies up to several PeV, much remains to be discovered regarding their origin and nature. Currently, the discovery of point sources of neutrinos is hindered by atmospheric neutrino backgrounds; likewise, astrophysical neutrino flavor ratio measurements are limited by the difficulty of discriminating between electron and tau neutrinos. TAMBO is a next-generation neutrino telescope specifically designed to detect tau neutrinos in the 1-100 PeV energy range. This tau neutrino specificity enables a nearly background-free identification of astrophysical neutrino sources, as well as tests of the flavor ratio of astrophysical neutrinos. TAMBO will comprise an array of water Cherenkov and plastic scintillator detectors deployed on the face of the Colca Canyon in the Peruvian Andes, with its unique geometry facilitating the high-purity measurement of astrophysical tau neutrinos. In this poster, I will present the prospects of TAMBO in the context of next-generation neutrino observatories and provide an overview of its current status.

Poster prize Yes
Given name Will
Surname Thompson
First affiliation Harvard University
Institutional email will_thompson@g.harvard.edu
Gender Male
Collaboration (if any) TAMBO Collaboration

Primary author

Will Thompson (Harvard University)

Presentation materials