A neutrino with an estimated energy of 220 PeV – that’s 220 million billion electron volts – slammed into the seawater near the detector. The event designated KM3-230213A is the “most energetic ...
These results demonstrate the nature of quarks as relativistic neutrinos forming rotating equilateral triangles and ...
This rare event offers a unique opportunity to explore the universe, including probing the fundamental properties of the ...
Our estimates of the size of a neutrino span from smaller than an atomic nucleus to as large as a few metres, but now we are starting to narrow down its true value ...
A “ghost particle” discovered by a detector in the Mediterranean carried 30 times more energy than any neutrino observed to ...
Electron antineutrinos are emitted during nuclear beta decay, a type of radioactive decay in which a neutron decays into a ...
PARIS - A neutrino with 30 times more energy than any previously seen on Earth was detected by an unfinished observatory at ...
A deep-sea detector glimpsed a particle with 220 million billion electron volts of energy — around 20 times as energetic as any neutrino seen before.
A groundbreaking discovery has emerged from the depths of the Mediterranean Sea: the KM3NeT detector has identified the most ...
An extraordinary event consistent with a neutrino with an estimated energy of about 220 PeV (220 x 10 15 electron volts or 220 million billion electron volts), was detected on February 13 ...