Deep beneath the sea, the KM3NeT Neutrino telescope has captured something extraordinary. Unlike any traditional telescope, KM3NeT is designed to capture the fleeting traces of neutrinos—mysterious subatomic particles that travel through space and could unlock the deepest secrets of the universe.

KM3NeT is a monumental collaboration of engineering and science, comprising two distinct telescopes located several kilometres below the sea’s surface. The Greek team playing a key role in KM3NeT’s construction, operation, data analysis and management are dedicated scientists Christos Markou, director of the Institute of Nuclear and Particle Physics (INPP) at NCSR “DEMOKRITOS”​, along with Ekaterini Tzamariudaki, Evangelia Drakopoulou, the technical personnel, students and PostDocs.

Check the YouTube channel: https://bit.ly/42U16Ey

to hear all the details from the experts: join Paschal Coyle and Miles Lindsey Clark from CNRS in Paris, Aart Heijboer from Nikhef (National Institute for Subatomic Physics) in Amsterdam, and Rosa Coniglione from INFN in Rome as they unveil this exciting discovery!

🔗 Learn more: https://www.km3net.org

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