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Space

Scientists Find 'Ghost Particles' Spewing From Our Milky Way Galaxy (space.com) 16

According to new findings published in the journal Science, astronomers have detected high-energy neutrinos (also known as "ghost particles") coming from within our Milky Way galaxy. Space.com reports: High-energy neutrinos are known to originate from galaxies beyond the Milky Way. But researchers have long suspected that our own galaxy is a source as well. For example, when cosmic rays -- atomic nuclei moving at nearly the speed of light -- strike dust and gas, they generate both gamma rays and high-energy neutrinos. Previous research has detected gamma rays from the Milky Way's plane, so scientists have expected high-energy neutrinos from there as well. There have been hints of such emission, but confirmation has proven elusive to date. The new study took another look, using the IceCube Neutrino Observatory at the Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station. IceCube is embedded within a gigaton (1 billion tons) of ice, making it the first gigaton neutrino detector ever built. IceCube encompasses 0.24 cubic miles (1 cubic kilometer) of Antarctic ice holding more than 5,000 light sensors. These devices watch for the unique flashes of light that result from the rare instances in which neutrinos do smash into atoms.

The research team focused on the plane of the Milky Way, the dense region of the galaxy that lies along the Milky Way's equator. They studied 10 years of IceCube data, analyzing 60,000 neutrinos -- 30 times more than prior neutrino scans of the galactic plane had looked at. [...] This work identified high-energy neutrinos that likely came from the Milky Way's galactic plane. "This observation of high-energy neutrinos opens up an entirely new window to study the properties of our host galaxy," study co-author Mirco Huennefeld, an astroparticle physicist at TU Dortmund University in Germany, told Space.com. "I think it's exciting to see the young field of neutrino astronomy develop with such an increasing pace," Huennefeld added. "It took decades to envision a neutrino telescope such as IceCube, and just in the last few years, we saw an accumulation of exciting observations, including the first evidence of extragalactic sources. Now, with these results, we have achieved a new milestone in neutrino astronomy."

Although the findings suggest that the newfound neutrinos come from our galaxy, IceCube currently is not sensitive enough to pinpoint their sources. They may emerge in a diffuse manner, or a significant number of them might come from specific points in the sky, Huennefeld said. In the coming years, IceCube will get detector upgrades "that will further enhance its sensitivity, allowing us to obtain a clearer picture of the Milky Way in neutrinos in the near future," Huennefeld said. "Answering these questions will have implications on our understanding of cosmic rays and their origin, and also in general on the inferred properties of our host galaxy."

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Scientists Find 'Ghost Particles' Spewing From Our Milky Way Galaxy

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  • Headline misleading (Score:5, Informative)

    by greytree ( 7124971 ) on Friday June 30, 2023 @04:36AM (#63645692)
    Rather than finding that neutrinos are "spewing out" of our galaxy, the main finding of the research is that there are less neutrinos coming from our galaxy than from extra-galactic sources.

    Do the editors RTFA?
    • by cstacy ( 534252 ) on Friday June 30, 2023 @04:52AM (#63645716)

      "Science" articles generally involve a lot of spewing, right out of the gate, because the "science reporters" don't understand what the scientists are trying to say. Then it goes through several chains of further distortion before you read it on Slashdot. Where the editors are dressing up and distoring and summarizing the summarizing of the summarized article that completely misunderstood the original report.

      Be grateful that some reader comes along and gives a link to the original research. You don't get that from 99% of the outlets covering the story.

      • by cstacy ( 534252 )

        "Science" articles generally involve a lot of spewing, right out of the gate, because the "science reporters" don't understand what the scientists are trying to say. Then it goes through several chains of further distortion before you read it on Slashdot. Where the editors are dressing up and distoring and summarizing the summarizing of the summarized article that completely misunderstood the original report.

        Be grateful that some reader comes along and gives a link to the original research. You don't get that from 99% of the outlets covering the story.

        I mean, come on. "Ghost Particles"? As "science" on a "nerd" web site?

        Who you gonna call?

        • Who you gonna call?

          I would be more concerned they were coming from inside our galaxy and we'd have to get out. Now.

          • by Anonymous Coward

            Who you gonna call?

            I would be more concerned they were coming from inside our galaxy and we'd have to get out. Now.

            Just make sure you check the back seat of your spaceship before you go.

            • by cstacy ( 534252 )

              Who you gonna call?

              I would be more concerned they were coming from inside our galaxy and we'd have to get out. Now.

              Just make sure you check the back seat of your spaceship before you go.

              No, let's stay in the galaxy and go hide in the nebula i the back yard, even though there's a perfectly good spaceship sitting right there.

        • I mean, come on. "Ghost Particles"? As "science" on a "nerd" web site?

          Who you gonna call?

          Ummm, never having seen the movie (were there several?), would "Ice-Cube Busters!" be about right?

    • by Pascoea ( 968200 )

      Do the editors RTFA?

      They know we don't, so they don't bother either.

  • by PJ6 ( 1151747 ) on Friday June 30, 2023 @06:36AM (#63645828)
    We all know what they are, and curiosity will inform anyone who doesn't.
  • I wonder if Ice T has gone into hiding since finding out what they've done with Cube.

    • I wonder if Ice T has gone into hiding since finding out what they've done with Cube.

      Of course, you mean Water-T [fandom.com] -- his exile was lifted. :-)

  • News for nerds. Nerds call them neutrinos, not ghost particles.

  • So that's about 1.5 neutrinos per square degree of sky. If they were evenly distributed, which of course they're not, since the interpreters are trying to differentiate galactic-plane (and bulge) neutrinos from extra-galactic ones. Since the (Milky Way) galaxy covers about 2/3 of the sky (with fuzzy edges and genuine questions over which satellite galaxies to include as "Milky Way"), that's not far from saying "this square degree sources two neutrinos, while that square degree sourced none".

    Remind me again

The biggest difference between time and space is that you can't reuse time. -- Merrick Furst

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