- ANTARES (telescope)
ANTARES is the name of a
neutrino telescope residing in theMediterranean Sea off the coast ofToulon ,France . It will observe neutrinos from theSouthern Hemisphere to complement the northern hemisphere work ofIceCube . The name comes from Astronomy with a Neutrino Telescope and Abyss environmental RESearch project; theacronym also being the name of a prominent star. Other neutrino telescopes designed for use in the nearby area include the Greek NESTOR telescope and the Italian NEMO telescope, which are both in early design stages.The array contains a set of twelve separate vertical strings of
photomultiplier tubes. Each one has 75 optical modules and is about 350meters long. They are anchored at the bottom of the sea at a depth of about 2.5 km, roughly 70 meters apart from each other. Unlike traditional telescopes, ANTARES works by facing downward, into the earth. This is because the earth is nearly transparent to neutrinos but not to the atmosphericmuons , which produce the most important physics background in a neutrino telescope. When neutrinos enter the southern hemisphere of the earth, they usually continue traveling directly through it. On rare occasions, a fewmuon neutrinos interact with the water in the Mediterranean Sea. When this happens, they produce a high energy muon. As the muon passes through the water, it emitsCherenkov radiation , which ANTARES expects to detect on the photomultiplier tubes.In contrast to the
South Pole neutrino telescopes AMANDA andIceCube , ANTARES uses water instead of ice as its Cherenkov medium. As light in water is less scattered than in ice this results in a betterresolving power . On the other hand, water contains more sources of background light than ice (radioactive isotopespotassium -40 in the sea salt and bioluminescent organisms), leading to a higher energy thresholds for ANTARES with respect to IceCube and making more sophisticated background-suppression methods necessary.Construction history
The construction of ANTARES has been completed May 30th, 2008, two years after the first string was deployed.Initial testing began in 2000. Equipment indirectly related to the detector such as a
seismometer were deployed in 2005. The first string of photomultiplier tubes was moved into place in February 2006. In September 2006 the second line was successfully connected. Lines 3, 4 and 5 were deployed at the end of 2006 and connected in January 2007. This was an important step that made Antares the biggest neutrino telescope in the Northern hemisphere (surpassing theBaikal neutrino telescope ). Lines 6, 7, 8, 9, and 10 were deployed between March and early November 2007 and connected in December 2007 and January 2008.Deployment and connection of the detector are performed in cooperation with the French
oceanographic institute,IFREMER , currently using theROV Victor, for some past operations thesubmarine Nautile .Experimental goals
The ANTARES project is the counterpart to
IceCube Neutrino Detector . The detection principles of the two projects are very similar, and they point toward opposite hemispheres. ANTARES will detect neutrinos from high energy origin, particularly in the range from toelectron-volts (100GeV - 100TeV ). Over several years of operation, it may be able to produce a map of the neutrinoflux from cosmic origins in the southern hemisphere. Of particular interest is the detection of astrophysical point sources of neutrinos, possibly in correlation with observations in other bands (such as gamma rays sources observed by theHESS telescope inNamibia , which has a common field of view with ANTARES).Apart from this astro-particle physics aspect, the ANTARES telescope will also tackle some fundamental problems in particle physics, such as the search for
dark matter in the form ofneutralino annihilation in thesun ("normal"solar neutrinos being outside the energy range of ANTARES) or thegalactic centre . Due to the very different methods employed, its expected sensitivity is nearly complementary to the direct dark matter searches performed by various experiments such asDAMA ,CDMS and at theLHC . Detection of neutralino signals would also confirmsupersymmetry . Other possible "exotic" phenomena that could be measured by ANTARES include nuclearites ormagnetic monopoles .Additional Instrumentation
In addition to the main optical detector for cosmic neutrinos, the ANTARES experiment also houses a number of instruments for the study of the
deep sea environment, such assalinity andoxygen probes,sea current profilers and instrumentation for the measurement of light transmission and sound velocity. Also, a camera system has been installed for the automatic tracking of bioluminescent organisms. Results from these instruments, while also important for the calibration of the detector, will be shared with ocean science institutes involved in the ANTARES collaboration. While the ANTARES detector contains an acoustic positioning system for the alignment of the free-floating detector lines, it also houses a separate dedicated acoustic detection system AMADEUS, which will comprise 6 converted ANTARES storeys with hydrophones to evaluate the possibility for the acoustic detection of neutrinos in the deep sea. The first 3 of these acoustic storeys have been included in the "instrumentation line", the other 3 on the 12th line.References
[http://antares.in2p3.fr/ ANTARES home]
[http://www.ifremer.fr/anglais/ IFREMER homepage (in english)]
[http://www.km3net.org KM3NeT neutrino telescope]
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