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IceCube: Hunting Neutrinos

Connor Duffy, IceCube/NSF
Carlos Argüelles-Delgado is a neutrino physicist. Their work explores the properties of neutrinos using data from the IceCube Neutrino Observatory and Harvard’s Cannon computing cluster.

The IceCube detector is buried in the Antarctic continental glacier, close to the geographic South Pole. IceCube observes neutrinos that are up to six orders of magnitude higher in energy than those produced at accelerators today. Most of these neutrinos are produced in the collision of cosmic rays with the Earth's atmosphere, while the rarest of them are neutrinos of cosmic origin that come from some of the most extreme environments in the Universe. Argüelles develops new techniques to study these neutrinos and characterize them to search for new neutrino physics and understand the origin of the high-energy astrophysical neutrino flux.

Carlos Argüelles-Delgado
Assistant Professor of Physics

Research projects

The Rhode Island Coastal Hazards Analysis, Modeling, and Prediction System
Remote Sensing of Earth Systems
The Kempner Institute - Unlocking Intelligence
Genome Forecasting
A Future of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles
Modeling Breast Cancer Spread
Impact of Marine Heatwaves on Coral Diversity
Electron Heating in Kinetic-Alfvén-Wave Turbulence
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Collaborative projects

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Outreach & Education Projects

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