Results of the follow-up of ANTARES neutrino alerts
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Albert, A.; Díaz García, Antonio Francisco; Navas Concha, Sergio; ANTARES Collaboration; Master Collaboration; M.W.A. Collaboration; Swift Collaboration; TAROT CollaborationEditorial
IOPScience
Date
2024-02-26Referencia bibliográfica
Albert, A. et al. Results of the follow-up of ANTARES neutrino alerts. arXiv:2402.16498 [astro-ph.HE]. https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2402.16498
Patrocinador
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS); FEDER; Marie Curie Program; MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 PID2021-124591NBC41, -C42, -C43; EU NextGenerationEU (PRTR-C17.I01); ERDF ASFAE/2022/014, ASFAE/2022 /023, AST22 6.2; Junta de Andalucía CSIC-INFRA23013; Generalitat Valenciana PROMETEO/2020/019; EU MSC/101025085; European Organisation for Astronomical Research in the Southern Hemisphere under ESO programme(s) 095.D-0072(A)Résumé
High-energy neutrinos could be produced in the interaction of charged cosmic
rays with matter or radiation surrounding astrophysical sources. To look for transient sources
associated with neutrino emission, a follow-up program of neutrino alerts has been operating
within the ANTARES Collaboration since 2009. This program, named TAToO, has triggered robotic optical telescopes (MASTER, TAROT, ROTSE and the SVOM ground based
telescopes) immediately after the detection of any relevant neutrino candidate and scheduled
several observations in the weeks following the detection. A subset of ANTARES events with
highest probabilities of being of cosmic origin has also been followed by the Swift and the
INTEGRAL satellites, the Murchison Widefield Array radio telescope and the H.E.S.S. highenergy gamma-ray telescope. The results of twelve years of observations are reported. No
optical counterpart has been significantly associated with an ANTARES candidate neutrino
signal during image analysis. Constraints on transient neutrino emission have been set. In
September 2015, ANTARES issued a neutrino alert and during the follow-up, a potential
transient counterpart was identified by Swift and MASTER. A multi-wavelength follow-up
campaign has allowed to identify the nature of this source and has proven its fortuitous association with the neutrino. The return of experience is particularly important for the design
of the alert system of KM3NeT, the next generation neutrino telescope in the Mediterranean
Sea.
Excepté là où spécifié autrement, la license de ce document est décrite en tant que Atribución 4.0 Internacional
Ítems relacionados
Mostrando ítems relacionados por Título, autor o materia.