M. Börner’s research while affiliated with TU Dortmund University and other places

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Publications (155)


Erratum: The IceCube Neutrino Observatory: instrumentation and online systems
  • Article

May 2024

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34 Reads

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10 Citations

Journal of Instrumentation

M.G. Aartsen

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M. Ackermann

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M. Zoll

Velocity independent constraints on spin-dependent DM-nucleon interactions from IceCube and PICO
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  • Full-text available

September 2020

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127 Reads

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14 Citations

The European Physical Journal C

Adopting the Standard Halo Model (SHM) of an isotropic Maxwellian velocity distribution for dark matter (DM) particles in the Galaxy, the most stringent current constraints on their spin-dependent scattering cross-section with nucleons come from the IceCube neutrino observatory and the PICO-60 C3F8 superheated bubble chamber experiments. The former is sensitive to high energy neutrinos from the self-annihilation of DM particles captured in the Sun, while the latter looks for nuclear recoil events from DM scattering off nucleons. Although slower DM particles are more likely to be captured by the Sun, the faster ones are more likely to be detected by PICO. Recent N-body simulations suggest significant deviations from the SHM for the smooth halo component of the DM, while observations hint at a dominant fraction of the local DM being in substructures. We use the method of Ferrer et al. (JCAP 1509: 052, 2015) to exploit the complementarity between the two approaches and derive conservative constraints on DM-nucleon scattering. Our results constrain σSD≲3×10-39cm2 (6×10-38cm2) at ≳90% C.L. for a DM particle of mass 1 TeV annihilating into τ+τ- (bb¯) with a local density of ρDM=0.3GeV/cm3. The constraints scale inversely with ρDM and are independent of the DM velocity distribution.

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Computational techniques for the analysis of small signals in high-statistics neutrino oscillation experiments

July 2020

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34 Reads

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12 Citations

Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section A Accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment

The current and upcoming generation of Very Large Volume Neutrino Telescopes—collecting unprecedented quantities of neutrino events—can be used to explore subtle effects in oscillation physics, such as (but not restricted to) the neutrino mass ordering. The sensitivity of an experiment to these effects can be estimated from Monte Carlo simulations. With the high number of events that will be collected, there is a trade-off between the computational expense of running such simulations and the inherent statistical uncertainty in the determined values. In such a scenario, it becomes impractical to produce and use adequately-sized sets of simulated events with traditional methods, such as Monte Carlo weighting. In this work we present a staged approach to the generation of expected distributions of observables in order to overcome these challenges. By combining multiple integration and smoothing techniques which address limited statistics from simulation it arrives at reliable analysis results using modest computational resources.


In-situ calibration of the single-photoelectron charge response of the IceCube photomultiplier tubes

June 2020

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30 Reads

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31 Citations

Journal of Instrumentation

We describe an improved in-situ calibration of the single-photoelectron charge distributions for each of the in-ice Hamamatsu Photonics R7081-02[MOD] photomultiplier tubes in the IceCube Neutrino Observatory. The characterization of the individual PMT charge distributions is important for PMT calibration, data and Monte Carlo simulation agreement, and understanding the effect of hardware differences within the detector. We discuss the single photoelectron identification procedure and how we extract the single-photoelectron charge distribution using a deconvolution of the multiple-photoelectron charge distribution.


A Search for Neutrino Point-source Populations in 7 yr of IceCube Data with Neutrino-count Statistics

April 2020

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31 Reads

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21 Citations

The Astrophysical Journal

The presence of a population of point sources in a data set modifies the underlying neutrino-count statistics from the Poisson distribution. This deviation can be exactly quantified using the non-Poissonian template fitting technique, and in this work we present the first application of this approach to the IceCube high-energy neutrino data set. Using this method, we search in 7 yr of IceCube data for point-source populations correlated with the disk of the Milky Way, the Fermi bubbles, the Schlegel, Finkbeiner, and Davis dust map, or with the isotropic extragalactic sky. No evidence for such a population is found in the data using this technique, and in the absence of a signal, we establish constraints on population models with source-count distribution functions that can be described by a power law with a single break. The derived limits can be interpreted in the context of many possible source classes. In order to enhance the flexibility of the results, we publish the full posterior from our analysis, which can be used to establish limits on specific population models that would contribute to the observed IceCube neutrino flux.


Figure 2. IceTop array geometry with locations for 81 stations and in-ice string holes. The stations that form the denser infill array for lower-energy showers are also demarcated.
Figure 7. Number of in-ice array hit DOMs binned in vertical DOM number and the hit time (t hit ) relative to the IceTop trigger (t trigger ) for a collection of experimental events that have no in-ice array HLC hits. The vertical DOM number denotes the position of the hit DOM on its string; larger numbers are on deeper layers of the array. The green box delimits the region within which charge is selected for event classification.
Figure 11. All-sky likelihood scan pretrial p-value shown in Galactic coordinates for |b|>5. The H.E.S.S. sources in the analysis FOV are shown in black.
Figure 13. All-sky likelihood scan pretrial p-values shown projected from the South Pole in equatorial units. The R.A. is labeled along the figure axes, with the interior text denoting decl. bands. The green circle highlights the hottest spot in the scan. The Galactic plane region (>5° in Galactic latitude) is also shown.
Figure 14. Reconstructed directions and 1σ uncertainties of events from the 4 yr HESE neutrino sample superimposed on the all-sky scan results.

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Search for PeV Gamma-Ray Emission from the Southern Hemisphere with 5 Yr of Data from the IceCube Observatory

February 2020

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64 Reads

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23 Citations

The Astrophysical Journal

The measurement of diffuse PeV gamma-ray emission from the Galactic plane would provide information about the energy spectrum and propagation of Galactic cosmic rays, and the detection of a pointlike source of PeV gamma-rays would be strong evidence for a Galactic source capable of accelerating cosmic rays up to at least a few PeV. This paper presents several unbinned maximum-likelihood searches for PeV gamma-rays in the Southern Hemisphere using 5 yr of data from the IceTop air shower surface detector and the in-ice array of the IceCube Observatory. The combination of both detectors takes advantage of the low muon content and deep shower maximum of gamma-ray air showers and provides excellent sensitivity to gamma-rays between similar to 0.6 and 100 PeV. Our measurements of pointlike and diffuse Galactic emission of PeV gamma-rays are consistent with the background, so we constrain the angle-integrated diffuse gamma-ray flux from the Galactic plane at 2 PeV to 2.61 x 10(-19) cm(-2) s(-1) TeV-1 at 90% confidence, assuming an E-3 spectrum, and we estimate 90% upper limits on pointlike emission at 2 PeV between 10(-21) and 10(-20) cm(-2) s(-1) TeV-1 for an E-2 spectrum, depending on decl. Furthermore, we exclude unbroken power-law emission up to 2 PeV for several TeV gamma-ray sources observed by the High Energy Spectroscopic System and calculate upper limits on the energy cutoffs of these sources at 90% confidence. We also find no PeV gamma-rays correlated with neutrinos from IceCube's high-energy starting event sample. These are currently the strongest constraints on PeV gamma-ray emission.


A Search for MeV to TeV Neutrinos from Fast Radio Bursts with IceCube

February 2020

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47 Reads

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30 Citations

The Astrophysical Journal

We present two searches for IceCube neutrino events coincident with 28 fast radio bursts (FRBs) and 1 repeating FRB. The first improves on a previous IceCube analysis-searching for spatial and temporal correlation of events with FRBs at energies greater than roughly 50 GeV-by increasing the effective area by an order of magnitude. The second is a search for temporal correlation of MeV neutrino events with FRBs. No significant correlation is found in either search; therefore, we set upper limits on the time-integrated neutrino flux emitted by FRBs for a range of emission timescales less than one day. These are the first limits on FRB neutrino emission at the MeV scale, and the limits set at higher energies are an order-of-magnitude improvement over those set by any neutrino telescope.


Time-Integrated Neutrino Source Searches with 10 Years of IceCube Data

February 2020

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47 Reads

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413 Citations

Physical Review Letters

This Letter presents the results from pointlike neutrino source searches using ten years of IceCube data collected between April 6, 2008 and July 10, 2018. We evaluate the significance of an astrophysical signal from a pointlike source looking for an excess of clustered neutrino events with energies typically above ∼1 TeV among the background of atmospheric muons and neutrinos. We perform a full-sky scan, a search within a selected source catalog, a catalog population study, and three stacked Galactic catalog searches. The most significant point in the northern hemisphere from scanning the sky is coincident with the Seyfert II galaxy NGC 1068, which was included in the source catalog search. The excess at the coordinates of NGC 1068 is inconsistent with background expectations at the level of 2.9σ after accounting for statistical trials from the entire catalog. The combination of this result along with excesses observed at the coordinates of three other sources, including TXS 0506+056, suggests that, collectively, correlations with sources in the northern catalog are inconsistent with background at 3.3σ significance. The southern catalog is consistent with background. These results, all based on searches for a cumulative neutrino signal integrated over the 10 years of available data, motivate further study of these and similar sources, including time-dependent analyses, multimessenger correlations, and the possibility of stronger evidence with coming upgrades to the detector.


Design and performance of the first IceAct demonstrator at the South Pole

February 2020

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29 Reads

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7 Citations

Journal of Instrumentation

In this paper we describe the first results of IceAct, a compact imaging air-Cherenkov telescope operating in coincidence with the IceCube Neutrino Observatory (IceCube) at the geographic South Pole. An array of IceAct telescopes (referred to as the IceAct project) is under consideration as part of the IceCube-Gen2 extension to IceCube. Surface detectors in general will be a powerful tool in IceCube-Gen2 for distinguishing astrophysical neutrinos from the dominant backgrounds of cosmic-ray induced atmospheric muons and neutrinos: the IceTop array is already in place as part of IceCube, but has a high energy threshold. Although the duty cycle will be lower for the IceAct telescopes than the present IceTop tanks, the IceAct telescopes may prove to be more effective at lowering the detection threshold for air showers. Additionally, small imaging air-Cherenkov telescopes in combination with IceTop, the deep IceCube detector or other future detector systems might improve measurements of the composition of the cosmic ray energy spectrum. In this paper we present measurements of a first 7-pixel imaging air Cherenkov telescope demonstrator, proving the capability of this technology to measure air showers at the South Pole in coincidence with IceTop and the deep IceCube detector.


Development of an analysis to probe the neutrino mass ordering with atmospheric neutrinos using three years of IceCube DeepCore data: IceCube Collaboration

January 2020

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68 Reads

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28 Citations

The European Physical Journal C

The Neutrino Mass Ordering (NMO) remains one of the outstanding questions in the field of neutrino physics. One strategy to measure the NMO is to observe matter effects in the oscillation pattern of atmospheric neutrinos above 1GeV\sim 1\,\mathrm {GeV}, as proposed for several next-generation neutrino experiments. Moreover, the existing IceCube DeepCore detector can already explore this type of measurement. We present the development and application of two independent analyses to search for the signature of the NMO with three years of DeepCore data. These analyses include a full treatment of systematic uncertainties and a statistically-rigorous method to determine the significance for the NMO from a fit to the data. Both analyses show that the dataset is fully compatible with both mass orderings. For the more sensitive analysis, we observe a preference for normal ordering with a p-value of pIO=15.3%p_\mathrm {IO} = 15.3\% and CLs=53.3%\mathrm {CL}_\mathrm {s}=53.3\% for the inverted ordering hypothesis, while the experimental results from both analyses are consistent within their uncertainties. Since the result is independent of the value of δCP\delta _\mathrm {CP} and obtained from energies Eν5GeVE_\nu \gtrsim 5\,\mathrm {GeV}, it is complementary to recent results from long-baseline experiments. These analyses set the groundwork for the future of this measurement with more capable detectors, such as the IceCube Upgrade and the proposed PINGU detector.


Citations (73)


... With the introduction of the WIMP (Weakly Interacting Massive Particle) scenario [36], the search for DM candidates in the GeV∼TeV mass range became prominent. Despite the recent advancement in DM direct-detection experiments such as LUX [37], XENON-100 [38], PANDAX-II [39,40], XENON-1T [41,42], LZ [43] and indirect-detection experiments such as PAMELA [44,45], AMS-2 [46], Fermi Gamma-ray space Telescope [47] and IceCube [48,49] to name few, there has been no hint of any excess of signal events over the background indicating a DM particle signature. This has led to a highly constraint parameter space for BSM scenarios with a DM candidate detectable at these experiments. ...

Reference:

Singlet-doublet fermionic dark matter in gauge theory of baryons
Search for Neutrinos from Dark Matter Self-Annihilations in the center of the Milky Way with 3 years of IceCube/DeepCore

... SWGO's flux uncertainties are approximately 15%-20%, with calibration and atmospheric effects each contributing about 10%-15% [120]. Concerning neutrino detectors, IceCube displays flux uncertainties ranging from 10%-20%, with optical properties of ice introducing uncertainties of up to 10%-15% and calibration uncertainties around 10% [121,122]. IceCube Gen 2 demonstrates similar uncertainties, slightly improved to around 10%-15% [123,124]. KM3Net reports flux uncertainties of 15%-20%, with uncertainties in water properties and calibration reaching up to 10%-15% each [48,125]. ...

Erratum: The IceCube Neutrino Observatory: instrumentation and online systems
  • Citing Article
  • May 2024

Journal of Instrumentation

... The PMNS matrix elements remain the least constrained experimentally [1], however the kinematic suppression of the charged current (CC) cross section due to is in part overcome at the relatively high energy threshold of DeepCore [2]. This fact, combined with the statistical power of an atmospheric source in a uniquely large detector, makes DeepCore a world-leading probe of PMNS unitarity [3]. ...

Measurement of atmospheric tau neutrino appearance with IceCube DeepCore
  • Citing Article
  • February 2019

... Sub-degree pointing resolution is needed to resolve the neutrino sky [279][280][281][282][283] while also reducing the systematic uncertainties on cross section [284][285][286][287][288] and inelasticity measurements [289]. Resolving the neutrino sky will be important to search for BSM physics that causes anisotropies. ...

Measurements using the inelasticity distribution of multi-TeV neutrino interactions in IceCube
  • Citing Article
  • February 2019

... A diffuse flux of astrophysical high-energy neutrinos has been observed by IceCube over the last 10 years [15][16][17][18][19]. However, due to directional uncertainties, positional analyses have not yet been able to uncover the sources [20][21][22][23][24][25][26][27][28][29][30][31]. For this reason, there is still a fundamental role to be played by the other neutrino telescopes with different energy and directional resolutions. ...

Search for steady point-like sources in the astrophysical muon neutrino flux with 8 years of IceCube data
  • Citing Article
  • March 2019

... Multimessenger astronomy has started to play an emerging role in astroparticle studies. The possibility of joint detections using different mediators, like photons, gravitational waves, high energy cosmic rays, and neutrinos, has already opened new perspectives in cosmic and astronomical studies [3]. ...

Search for Multimessenger Sources of Gravitational Waves and High-energy Neutrinos with Advanced LIGO during Its First Observing Run, ANTARES, and IceCube
  • Citing Article
  • January 2019

... In particular, such components may remain with a small velocity dispersion and co-rotating with the Galactic disc, resulting in a substantial contribution to the low speed tail of the f (u) in the reference frame of the Solar system. Based on the above considerations, several attempts have been made to develop haloindependent approaches with the goal to remove the dependence of the experimental bounds on the choice of a specific f (u), both for the WIMP-nucleus and for WIMP-electron scattering process [21][22][23][24][25][26][27][28][29][30][31][32][33][34][35][36][37][38][39][40], i.e. to work out the most conservative bounds from null searches compatible with the only constraint: but allowing for any possible speed profile of the distribution. In order to do so it is necessary to combine DD with capture in the Sun: in fact, due to the experimental threshold, DD searches are not sensitive to small WIMP speeds while capture in the Sun is suppressed for fast WIMPs. ...

Velocity independent constraints on spin-dependent DM-nucleon interactions from IceCube and PICO

The European Physical Journal C

... The analysis was implemented in the PISA [25] framework. The optimization was done using the differential evolution global minimization method [26] in order to be able to explore the parameter space thoroughly and also to introduce parameter-dependent boundaries, which are needed as described in Sec. ...

Computational techniques for the analysis of small signals in high-statistics neutrino oscillation experiments
  • Citing Article
  • July 2020

Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section A Accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment

... The data used for this analysis were taken with the full detector configuration (IC86) over nine years from May 2011 to May 2020. A more accurate charge response has been applied to all data, following a re-calibration campaign ("Pass2") [31]. Only data where all eighty-six in-ice strings and at least 310 IceTop DOMs were active are used. ...

In-situ calibration of the single-photoelectron charge response of the IceCube photomultiplier tubes
  • Citing Article
  • June 2020

Journal of Instrumentation

... The upper limit on neutrino emission from individual point sources has implications for the properties of candidate neutrino sources responsible for the observed diffuse flux [12,39,[44][45][46][47][48][49][50][51][52][53][54][55][56][57][58][59]. A common approach is to approximate the source population as a collection of standard candles whose comoving density evolves with redshift. ...

A Search for Neutrino Point-source Populations in 7 yr of IceCube Data with Neutrino-count Statistics
  • Citing Article
  • April 2020

The Astrophysical Journal