UChicago users: please log in using the "UChicago SSO (Okta)" option now.

Aug 26 – 30, 2024
University of Chicago
America/Chicago timezone

A high-efficiency UHE neutrino search combining the phased array and traditional antennas of the Askaryan Radio Array

Aug 28, 2024, 5:30 PM
15m
401 (ERC)

401

ERC

Speaker

Paramita Dasgupta (CCAPP Fellow at Ohio State University)

Description

The Askaryan Radio Array (ARA) is an in-ice ultra high energy (UHE, >10 PeV) neutrino experiment at the South Pole that aims to detect UHE-neutrino induced radio emission in ice. ARA consists of five independent stations each consisting of a cubical lattice of in-ice antenna clusters with side length ~10m buried ~200 m below the ice surface. The fifth station of ARA (A5) is special as this station has an additional central string, the phased array (PA), which provides an interferometric trigger that enables ARA to trigger on weak signals that are otherwise buried in noise. Leveraging the low threshold phased array trigger, ARA was the first radio neutrino experiment to demonstrate significant improvement in sensitivity to weak signals. In this talk, we will present initial results from a neutrino search on A5 combining information from both the traditional ARA antennas and the phased array antennas. We will show the improved vertex reconstruction achieved with this approach, and leveraging this improvement, we expect to enhance the analysis efficiency beyond what has been achieved previously by ARA. This analysis is the paradigmatic representation of future neutrino searches with the next generation of in-ice neutrino experiments.

Primary author

Paramita Dasgupta (CCAPP Fellow at Ohio State University)

Presentation materials