“About one in a million neutrinos crash into a proton. We’re measuring the energy and the directions of those nuclear reactions to build a neutrino-based map of the sky,” said Francis Halzen, a theoretical physicist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and leader of IceCube.
The $100-million neutrino-detection effort is one of the most challenging ever attempted by engineers and physicists, Halzen said.
“Nobody would have bet on the success of this project, and rightfully so,” Halzen said. “If we knew how complex it would be to build, we may have never have started.”
In this gallery, take a tour of the world’s biggest, iciest particle detector.
Video: Animations show the drilling of IceCube’s 1.5-mile-deep holes, the completed array of light-detecting sensors and a simulation of a neutrino collision event.
Credit: NSF, IceCube/University of Madison-Wisconsin and Chris Bickel.
Authors: Dave Mosher