And It’s More Powerful Than Ever
by nasaspacenews February 22, 2025 in Astronomy, Astrophysics, Cosmology, News, Others
The Highest-Energy Neutrino Ever Detected: A Groundbreaking Discovery Beneath the Mediterranean Sea
Imagine capturing a glimpse of a cosmic ghost—something invisible, incredibly elusive, yet powerful enough to hold clues about the deepest mysteries of the universe. That’s exactly what scientists recently accomplished with the KM3NeT neutrino detector, despite the fact that the observatory isn’t even finished yet.
A Cosmic Breakthrough: What Happened?
On February 13, 2025, the unfinished KM3NeT detector made history. Even though the detector, submerged deep beneath the Mediterranean Sea, was only 10% complete, it managed to spot a neutrino with an extraordinary energy level of 220 petaelectronvolts (PeV)—a measurement so vast that it shattered all previous records. This groundbreaking discovery was reported in the prestigious journal Nature by the KM3NeT Collaboration.
Why Is This Discovery So Special?
Neutrinos are often referred to as “ghost particles” because they’re incredibly difficult to detect. Trillions of them pass through your body every second without leaving a trace. Unlike other particles, neutrinos have no electric charge and interact only via gravity and the weak nuclear force—making them incredibly elusive. The fact that KM3NeT managed to detect a neutrino with such an exceptionally high energy level is nothing short of a scientific marvel.
This detection marks a significant advancement in neutrino astrophysics, opening new pathways to investigate cosmic events that produce ultra-high-energy particles, such as supermassive black holes, gamma-ray bursts, and blazars.
Neutrinos are the universe’s most mysterious messengers. They’re the second most abundant particles in the cosmos (after photons), yet they’re incredibly difficult to observe because of how weakly they interact with matter.
Neutrinos come in various energy levels, categorized mainly into two groups:
- Atmospheric Neutrinos: Produced by cosmic rays hitting Earth’s atmosphere.
- Cosmogenic Neutrinos: Much rarer and more energetic, these particles originate from high-energy cosmic rays interacting with photons from the cosmic microwave background radiation.
Detecting cosmogenic neutrinos is crucial because they can carry information from some of the most extreme events in the universe. By analyzing these particles, scientists can gain insight into phenomena like black hole collisions and the origins of cosmic rays.
The KM3NeT observatory, though incomplete, managed to achieve the impossible.
Located at the bottom of the Mediterranean Sea, the Cubic Kilometre Neutrino Telescope (KM3NeT) was designed to detect elusive neutrinos by capturing the rare interactions they have with matter. When a high-energy neutrino interacts with water molecules, it creates Cherenkov radiation—a faint blue light that occurs when charged particles travel faster than the speed of light in water.
https://nasaspacenews.com/2025/02/t...1cm-radiation-reveals-the-milky-ways-secrets/
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