A neutrino with 30 times more energy than any previously seen on Earth was detected by an unfinished observatory at the bottom of the Mediterranean Sea after traveling from beyond this galaxy, scientists said.
Neutrinos are the second most abundant particle in the universe. Known as ghost particles, they have no electric charge, almost no mass and effortlessly pass through most matter — such as our world or bodies — without anyone noticing.
The most violently explosive events in the universe — such as a star going supernova, two neutron stars smashing into each other or the almighty suck of supermassive black holes — create what is called ultra-high-energy neutrinos.
Because these particles interact so little with matter, they glide easily away from the violence that created them, travelling in a straight line across the universe.
When they finally arrive at Earth, neutrinos serve as “special cosmic messengers” offering a glimpse into the far reaches of the cosmos that is otherwise hidden from our view, Italian researcher Rosa Coniglione said in a statement.
However, these ghost particles are extremely difficult to detect. One way is by using water.
When light passes through water, it slows down. This sometimes allows quick-moving particles to overtake light — while still not going faster than the speed of light.
When this happens, it creates a bluish glow called “Cherenkov light” that can be detected by extraordinarily sensitive sensors.
But to observe this light requires a huge amount of water — at least one cubic kilometer, the equivalent of 400,000 Olympic swimming pools.
That is why the Cubic Kilometre Neutrino Telescope, or KM3NeT, lies at the bottom of the Mediterranean.
The European-led facility is still under construction, and spread over two sites. Its ARCA detector, which is interested in astronomy, is nearly 3,500 meters (2.2 miles) underwater off the coast of Sicily.
The neutrino-hunting ORCA detector is in the depths near the French city of Toulon.
Cables hundreds of meters long equipped with photomultipliers —- which amplify miniscule amounts of light — have been anchored to the seabed nearby. Eventually 200,000 photomultipliers will be arrayed in the abyss.
But the ARCA detector was operating at just a tenth of what will be its eventual power when it spotted something strange on 13 February 2023, according to new research published in the journal Nature.
A muon, which is a heavy electron produced by a neutrino, “crossed the entire detector, inducing signals in more than one-third of the active sensors,” according to a statement from KM3NeT, which brings together 350 scientists from institutions in 21 countries.