Skip to main content
In series
English
Time
20:00 – 21:30
Location

Academy Building
Broerstraat 5
Netherlands

Tickets
€4,- / €2,- with SG-card / free for students

Fishing for Neutrinos in the Deep Sea

Daan van Eijk

At a depth of 3.5 kilometers in the Mediterranean Sea, Dutch scientists are constructing a massive neutrino detector called KM3NeT spanning one cubic kilometer. Recently KM3NeT detected an extraordinarily high-energy neutrino originating from outer space. Neutrinos are fundamental particles often referred to as "ghost particles" because they rarely interact with other matter. The energy of this cosmic neutrino was significantly greater than that of any neutrino previously detected on Earth. Is this a groundbreaking discovery? Moreover, what do we hope to learn from studying neutrinos? And why are scientists putting a telescope on the bottom of the ocean in the first place?

Daan van Eijk will explain what  is detected by exploring the inner workings of the KM3NeT detector. How does the detector allow us to detect these ghostly particles? What can they reveal about the astrophysical processes in our universe that produce these elusive particles?

Daan van Eijk is a particle physicist at Nikhef, the Dutch institute for subatomic physics. He earned his PhD for research conducted at the LHCb experiment, one of the detectors at the LHC particle accelerator at CERN in Geneva. He later held a postdoctoral position in the United States, working on the IceCube experiment, a neutrino detector embedded in the ice of the South Pole. Currently, he is a staff scientist at Nikhef, contributing to the KM3NeT experiment, which is being constructed at the bottom of the Mediterranean Sea. In addition, he is a guest lecturer at the University of Groningen.

Foto: Edewolf via Wikimedia Commons

Are you not able to attend? Watch the livestream here!

See also

Manfred Spitzer. Co-speaker Justine Pardoen
How we destroy our brains
English

Manfred Spitzer warns us that too much computer use leads to ‘digital dementia’. The more we use computers , the more our memory is deteriorating.

Met oa. Hans Achterhuis en Sally Haslanger
Nederlands

Op vrijdagavond 10 april is het Groninger Forum weer het toneel van de Groningse Nacht van de Filosofie.