The ANTARES Neutrino Telescope : Contributions to the 34th International Cosmic Ray Conference (ICRC 2015, The Hague)
The ANTARES Collaboration

TL;DR
This paper summarizes the ANTARES neutrino telescope's scientific contributions presented at ICRC 2015, highlighting its main physics results in astrophysical neutrino searches and multi-messenger analyses.
Contribution
It compiles 22 contributions from the ANTARES collaboration, showcasing diverse physics results and analyses from the largest Northern hemisphere neutrino telescope.
Findings
Detection of astrophysical neutrino candidates
Constraints on neutrino sources and fluxes
Results on exotic physics searches
Abstract
The ANTARES detector, completed in 2008, is the largest neutrino telescope in the Northern hemisphere. Located at a depth of 2.5 km in the Mediterranean Sea, 40 km off the Toulon shore, its main goal is the search for astrophysical high energy neutrinos. In this paper we collect 22 contributions of the ANTARES collaboration to the 34th International Cosmic Ray Conference (ICRC 2015). The scientific output is very rich and the contributions included in these proceedings cover the main physics results, ranging from steady point sources, diffuse searches, multi-messenger analyses to exotic physics.
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Dark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena · Neutrino Physics Research
