Design and Performance of an Interferometric Trigger Array for Radio Detection of High-Energy Neutrinos
P. Allison, S. Archambault, R. Bard, J. J. Beatty, M. Beheler-Amass,, D. Z. Besson, M. Beydler, M. Bogdan, C.-C. Chen, C.-H. Chen, P. Chen, B. A., Clark, A. Clough, A. Connolly, L. Cremonesi, J. Davies, C. Deaconu, M. A., DuVernois, E. Friedman, J. Hanson, K. Hanson, J. Haugen

TL;DR
The paper presents the NuPhase interferometric trigger array, which enhances radio detection of ultra-high energy neutrinos in ice by lowering the trigger threshold and increasing the effective detection volume, thus improving sensitivity to astrophysical neutrinos.
Contribution
Introduction of the NuPhase array with a coherent beamforming trigger that significantly improves trigger efficiency and lowers detection thresholds for high-energy neutrino radio signals.
Findings
50% trigger efficiency at SNR ≤ 2.0
50% increase in effective volume at 10-100 PeV
Potential to lower SNR threshold to 1.0 for further gains
Abstract
Ultra-high energy neutrinos are detectable through impulsive radio signals generated through interactions in dense media, such as ice. Subsurface in-ice radio arrays are a promising way to advance the observation and measurement of astrophysical high-energy neutrinos with energies above those discovered by the IceCube detector (1 PeV) as well as cosmogenic neutrinos created in the GZK process (100 PeV). Here we describe the detector, which is a compact receiving array of low-gain antennas deployed 185 m deep in glacial ice near the South Pole. Signals from the antennas are digitized and coherently summed into multiple beams to form a low-threshold interferometric phased array trigger for radio impulses. The NuPhase detector was installed at an Askaryan Radio Array (ARA) station during the 2017/18 Austral summer season. measurements with…
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