The Radio Neutrino Observatory Greenland (RNO-G)

Autor: Zachary S. Meyers, Allan Hallgren, Katie Carter, Anna Nelles, Thomas Meures, Ryan Krebs, Lilly Pyras, Krijn D. de Vries, N. Bingefors, John L. Kelley, Patrick Allison, U. Latif, Benjamin Hokanson-Fasig, Juan A. Aguilar, Dieder J. Van Den Broeck, Simon De Kockere, R. Lahmann, Ilse Plaisier, Stephanie Wissel, David Zeke Besson, Jorge Torres, M. A. DuVernois, Mitchell Magnuson, Simona Toscano, Kaeli Hughes, D. Tosi, Christian Glaser, Maddalena Cataldo, Bob Oeyen, Dirk Ryckbosch, Robert Young, Rno-g, Steffen Hallmann, Cosmin Deaconu, Zachary Curtis-Ginsberg, Daniel Southall, J. J. Beatty, Daniel Smith, Hans Bernhoff, C. Hornhuber, Katharine Mulrey, Paramita Dasgupta, Olga Botner, Sjoerd Bouma, Olaf Scholten, D. Seckel, Brian Clark, Alexander Novikov, Amy Connolly, Christoph Welling, Spencer Klein, Hershal Pandya, Stijn Buitink, Bryan Hendricks, Nick van Eijndhoven, Eric Oberla, A. Karle, Abigail G. Vieregg, Adrian Zink, Jordan C. Hanson
Rok vydání: 2021
Předmět:
Zdroj: Proceedings of 37th International Cosmic Ray Conference — PoS(ICRC2021).
Popis: The Radio Neutrino Observatory Greenland (RNO-G) is scheduled for deployment in the summerof 2021. It will target the detection of astrophysical and cosmogenic neutrinos above 10 PeV. With 35 autonomous stations, it will be the largest implementation of a radio neutrino detector to date.The stations combine best-practice instrumentation from all previous radio neutrino arrays, such as a deep phased-array trigger and surface antennas. These proceedings describe the experimentalconsiderations that have driven the design of RNO-G and the current progress in deployment, aswell as discuss the projected sensitivity of the instrument. RNO-G will provide a unique view ofthe Northern Sky and will also inform the design of the radio component of IceCube-Gen2.
Databáze: OpenAIRE