Neutrinos are tiny particles that nearly always skim unimpeded through Earth--and us--at a rate of trillions per second. We have detected them coming from space with a vast range of energies, but we don't know where they originate. Now, Andrea Palladino and Walter Winter at the German Electron Synchrotron in Zeuthen have devised a model that explains where these fleeting particles come from based on their energies and the directions they travelled to Earth. They used data from Icecube, the world's largest neutrino detector, which sits below the Antarctic ice
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