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GCN Circular 44033

Subject
IceCube-260315A: Upper limits from a search for additional neutrino events in IceCube
Date
2026-03-16T17:57:13Z (8 hours ago)
From
Alicia Mand at IceCube/UW-Madison <aemand@wisc.edu>
Via
Web form

The IceCube Collaboration (http://icecube.wisc.edu/) reports:

IceCube has performed a search [1] for additional track-like muon neutrino events arriving from the direction of IceCube-260315A (https://gcn.nasa.gov/circulars/44017

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) in a time range of 1000 seconds centered on the alert event time (2026-03-15 02:10:46.630 UTC to 2026-03-15 02:27:26.630 UTC) during which IceCube was collecting good quality data. Excluding the event that prompted the alert, zero track-like events are found within the 90% containment region of IceCube-260315A. We report a p-value of 1.00 in this time window. IceCube’s sensitivity to neutrino point sources with an E^-2.5 spectrum, expressed as E^2 dN/dE evaluated at 1 TeV, is 1.5e-01 GeV cm^-2 within the 90% spatial containment region of IceCube-260315A in a 1000 second time window. 90% of events IceCube would detect from a source at this declination with an E^-2.5 spectrum have energies in the approximate energy range between 3e+02 GeV and 2e+05 GeV.

A subsequent search was performed including 2 days of data centered on the alert event time (2026-03-14 02:19:06.630 UTC to 2026-03-16 02:19:06.630 UTC). In this case, we report a p-value of 1.00, consistent with no significant excess of track events. IceCube’s sensitivity to neutrino point sources with an E^-2.5 spectrum, expressed as E^2 dN/dE evaluated at 1 TeV, is 1.6e-01 GeV cm^-2 within the 90% spatial containment region of IceCube-260315A in a 2 day time window.

The IceCube Neutrino Observatory is a cubic-kilometer neutrino detector operating at the geographic South Pole, Antarctica. The IceCube realtime alert point of contact can be reached at roc@icecube.wisc.edu.

[1] IceCube Collaboration, R. Abbasi et al., ApJ 910 4 (2021)

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