Cosmic Neutrinos and the Cosmic-Ray Accelerator TXS 0506+056
Francis Halzen

TL;DR
This paper discusses the detection and analysis of cosmic neutrinos from extragalactic sources like blazars and Seyfert galaxies, highlighting recent discoveries, source characteristics, and implications for future neutrino telescope development.
Contribution
It presents new multimessenger observations linking specific neutrino events to astrophysical sources and discusses the significance of galaxy mergers and accretion events in neutrino production.
Findings
Identification of TXS 0506+056 as a neutrino source with a 3-month burst in 2014-15.
Coincidence of a 300-TeV neutrino with blazar PKS 1502+106 and its associated flare.
Evidence of galaxy mergers and accretion events in sources emitting high-energy neutrinos.
Abstract
IceCube discovered a flux of cosmic neutrinos originating in extragalactic sources with an energy density close to that in gamma rays and cosmic rays. A multimessenger campaign triggered by the coincident observation of a gamma-ray flare and a 290-TeV IceCube neutrino pinpointed the cosmic-ray accelerator TXS 0506+056. Subsequently, the IceCube archival data revealed a 3-month burst of 13 cosmic neutrinos in 2014-15 that dominates the neutrino flux of the source over the 9.5 years of observations. The original identification of the source as a blazar was puzzling because it requires a major accretion event onto the rotating supermassive black hole to accommodate the neutrino burst. Subsequent high-resolution radio images of the source with the VLBA brought to light a merger of two galaxies, revealed by the interaction of two jets entangled in the source. Recently, the blazar PKS…
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