World's Largest Neutrino Observatory Built at South Pole

A view down along one of IceCube's 86 detector strings, dangling in holes drilled up to 2.5 kilometers into the ice.
A sensor descends down a hole in the ice as part of the final season of IceCube.
(Image credit: NSF/B. Gudbjartsson.)

The world's largest neutrino telescope – made from a giant cube of ice at the South Pole – aimed at detecting subatomic particles traveling near the speed of light has been completed, researchers announced today (Dec. 20).

Construction of the IceCube Neutrino Observatory ended Dec. 18 (New Zealand time), although it's already been collecting data on the tiny particle for several years.

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