The KM3NeT telescope comprises two detectors, ARCA and ORCA, utilizing seawater to capture Cherenkov light—a bluish glow produced when neutrinos interact with water molecules.
A huge detector in the Mediterranean Sea spotted the most energetic neutrino from space to date. The particle could shed light on the universe’s most extreme phenomena.
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Although still under construction, the sea-floor KM3NeT detector spotted a neutrino 20 times more powerful than any ...
An extraordinary event consistent with a neutrino with an estimated energy of about 220 PeV (220 x 1015 electron volts or 220 ...
There’s something special about Mediterranean cuisine. It’s fresh, vibrant, and packed with flavors that transport you ...
When hundreds of eerily perfect circles were discovered on the bottom of the Mediterranean Sea, theories abounded about what they could mean. Four years of underwater research revealed a lost world.
Astronomers using a giant network of sensors, still under construction at the bottom of the Mediterranean Sea, have found the highest-energy cosmic “ghost particle” ever detected.
For example, the Mediterranean Sea has an average depth of about 4,900 feet (1,500 meters). The nature of seas to be shallower allows for higher penetration of light; this can host a different ...
This celebrated culinary tradition from countries bordering the Mediterranean Sea is not just about eating ... Garlic doesn’t just add depth to flavors—it also boasts antibacterial and ...
In a sea teeming with some of the largest creatures on the planet, a University of Miami scientist is studying how big of an ...
Bottom trawling, a fishing technique in which vessels drag weighted nets along the seafloor, has long been condemned by ...