Searches for high-energy neutrino emission in the Galaxy with the combined IceCube-AMANDA detector
IceCube collaboration: R. Abbasi, Y. Abdou, M. Ackermann, J. Adams, J., A. Aguilar, M. Ahlers, D. Altmann, K. Andeen, J. Auffenberg, X. Bai, M., Baker, S. W. Barwick, V. Baum, R. Bay, K. Beattie, J. J. Beatty, S. Bechet,, J. Becker Tjus, K.-H. Becker, M. Bell

TL;DR
This study combines IceCube and AMANDA data from 2007-2009 to search for high-energy neutrino sources in the Galactic plane, setting the most stringent upper limits to date for soft-spectrum sources.
Contribution
It introduces a combined analysis of IceCube and AMANDA data to improve sensitivity for Galactic neutrino sources at energies below 10 TeV.
Findings
No significant neutrino signals detected.
Established new upper limits on neutrino flux from Galactic sources.
Enhanced sensitivity for soft-spectrum neutrino sources below 10 TeV.
Abstract
We report on searches for neutrino sources at energies above 200 GeV in the Northern sky of the galactic plane, using the data collected by the South Pole neutrino telescopes IceCube and AMANDA. The galactic region considered here includes the Local Arm towards the Cygnus region and our closest approach to the Perseus Arm. The data have been collected between 2007 and 2009 when AMANDA was an integrated part of IceCube, which was still under construction and operated with 22-strings (2007-8) and 40-strings (2008-9) of optical modules deployed in the ice. By combining the larger IceCube detector with the lower energy threshold of the more compact AMANDA detector, we obtain an improved sensitivity at energies below 10 TeV with respect to previous searches. The analyses presented here are: a scan for point sources within the galactic plane; a search optimized for multiple and extended…
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