Level 1 - Absolute Beginner
Scientists study tiny particles called neutrinos. Neutrinos travel through space at close to the speed of light. They pass through almost everything without stopping. A special telescope under the sea was built to catch them.
On February 13, 2023, a telescope under the Mediterranean Sea found the most energetic neutrino ever seen. It had 220 PeV of energy. This is more than ten times the energy of any neutrino found before. Scientists called this an amazing discovery.
A new study in 2026 says the particle came from a blazar. A blazar is a powerful black hole in a very distant galaxy. It shoots a beam of energy toward Earth. Scientists are excited because this helps us understand the universe.
- neutrino
- a very tiny particle from space that travels at nearly the speed of light and passes through almost all matter
- telescope
- a scientific instrument used to observe distant objects in space
- Mediterranean Sea
- the sea located between Europe, Africa, and western Asia
- energy
- the ability to do work or cause change, measured in units such as electronvolts
- blazar
- an extremely powerful black hole in a distant galaxy that shoots a powerful beam of energy directly toward Earth
- black hole
- a region in space where gravity is so strong that nothing, not even light, can escape from it
- galaxy
- a massive system of billions of stars, gas, and dust held together by gravity
- particle
- an extremely small piece of matter that makes up atoms and other substances
Level 2 - Elementary
On February 13, 2023, the KM3NeT underwater telescope detected the most energetic cosmic neutrino ever observed. Located 3.5 kilometers below the surface of the Mediterranean Sea off the coast of Sicily, the ARCA component of KM3NeT registered a neutrino carrying an energy of approximately 220 petaelectronvolts (PeV). This was more than ten times the energy of any previously detected astrophysical neutrino, making it an extraordinary event in the history of particle physics.
Neutrinos are subatomic particles with almost no mass that travel through the universe at close to the speed of light. They pass through almost any material -- including the entire Earth -- without stopping. This makes them valuable messengers from the distant cosmos, but very difficult to detect. The original detection was published in the journal Nature and attracted global scientific attention.
A new study published in May 2026 has provided the most compelling evidence yet for the origin of this record-breaking event. The researchers identified 17 blazars within the region of sky from which the neutrino likely came. Blazars are active galactic nuclei powered by supermassive black holes that shoot enormous jets of plasma directly toward Earth. Scientists believe the particle was accelerated to its record energy inside one of these extreme cosmic jets. The discovery opens a new era of high-energy astrophysics.
- astrophysical
- relating to the physical properties and behavior of objects and phenomena in the universe
- subatomic
- smaller than an atom; describing fundamental particles such as protons, electrons, and neutrinos
- petaelectronvolt (PeV)
- a unit of energy in particle physics equal to one quadrillion electronvolts, used to measure extremely high-energy particles
- cosmic messenger
- a particle or form of radiation that travels from a distant source and carries information about its origin
- active galactic nucleus
- the bright, energetic region at the center of some galaxies, powered by material falling into a supermassive black hole
- blazar
- a type of active galactic nucleus whose powerful plasma jet is aimed almost exactly toward Earth, making it appear extremely bright
- plasma jet
- a stream of superheated, electrically charged gas traveling at nearly the speed of light from a black hole
- detection
- the act of observing or measuring a particle, signal, or event using specialized scientific instruments
Level 3 - Intermediate
Among the most tantalizing puzzles in high-energy astrophysics is the origin of the highest-energy cosmic rays and neutrinos reaching Earth. On February 13, 2023, the ARCA component of the KM3NeT underwater neutrino telescope recorded an event designated KM3-230213A, with a reconstructed energy of approximately 220 petaelectronvolts (PeV). This is more than ten times the energy of any previously detected astrophysical neutrino and comparable to some of the most energetic ultra-high-energy cosmic rays ever observed. The result was published in Nature in early 2025, establishing KM3NeT as the premier deep-sea neutrino observatory and prompting an immediate global search for the particle's cosmic origin.
Neutrinos are elementary particles carrying no electric charge and having a nearly negligible mass, allowing them to traverse the universe virtually unimpeded by gas, dust, magnetic fields, or background radiation. This makes them uniquely capable of carrying directional information from high-energy sources billions of light-years away. Identifying their origin is challenging, however, precisely because neutrinos interact so rarely with ordinary matter -- the same property that makes them excellent astrophysical messengers also makes them extraordinarily difficult to capture.
A new study published in May 2026 narrows the search to a population of blazars. By analyzing the 99 percent containment region of KM3-230213A's reconstructed arrival direction, researchers identified 17 blazars within the error region, several of which showed gamma-ray flaring activity near the detection date. Blazars are active galactic nuclei whose relativistic plasma jets are directed nearly along the observer's line of sight, making them among the most luminous objects in the observable sky. The research argues that the coincidence between the neutrino's trajectory, the blazar positions, and the concurrent gamma-ray data represents statistically compelling evidence for a hadronic acceleration origin -- meaning the neutrino was produced when high-energy protons collided inside a blazar's jet.
- reconstructed energy
- the estimated energy of a particle event, calculated from the indirect signals it leaves in a detector rather than measured directly
- containment region
- the area on the sky within which the true origin of a detected particle is statistically likely to fall, expressed as a probability interval
- cosmic microwave background
- the faint thermal radiation permeating the universe, a relic of the Big Bang, which can impede the travel of very high-energy photons but not neutrinos
- hadronic acceleration
- a process in which charged particles such as protons are accelerated to extreme energies and then produce neutrinos through collisions with other particles or photons
- relativistic
- traveling at a significant fraction of the speed of light, causing effects described by Einstein's special theory of relativity
Level 4 - Advanced
The detection of KM3-230213A by the KM3NeT/ARCA observatory -- a cubic-kilometer-scale array of optical sensors suspended 3.5 km beneath the Mediterranean's abyssal plain off Capo Passero, Sicily -- represents one of the most significant events in the still-young field of high-energy neutrino astronomy. The event, registered on February 13, 2023, and published in Nature in early 2025, carries a reconstructed energy of approximately 220 PeV, placing it in the same phenomenological tier as the highest-energy ultra-high-energy cosmic rays (UHECRs) and dwarfing by an order of magnitude the IceCube neutrino observatory's celebrated PeV-class events of the preceding decade. The extreme energy implies a production mechanism operating at the very frontier of what current astrophysical models can accommodate.
A new study published in May 2026 represents the most compelling candidate identification to date. By reconstructing the 99 percent angular containment region of KM3-230213A's arrival direction and cross-correlating it with multi-wavelength catalogs, the authors identified 17 blazars within the error ellipse, several of which displayed correlated gamma-ray flaring in Fermi-LAT data within months of the detection epoch. Blazars -- active galactic nuclei whose relativistic jets are oriented within a few degrees of the observer's line of sight -- are strong candidates for hadronic acceleration sites because their jets contain the proton density and magnetic field gradients required to accelerate cosmic rays to energies sufficient to generate PeV-scale neutrinos via pion photoproduction. The Doppler beaming that renders them among the most luminous objects in the observable universe simultaneously concentrates the accelerated proton flux along the jet axis, dramatically increasing the neutrino yield toward Earth.
The identification remains probabilistic rather than definitive. No single blazar within the containment region has been confirmed as the unique source: the angular resolution of the current KM3NeT array is insufficient to distinguish among the 17 candidates without additional multi-messenger data, particularly from future Very Large Array or Event Horizon Telescope follow-up observations. The critical next step is coincident detection -- catching a high-energy neutrino and a correlated blazar gamma-ray flare simultaneously with sub-degree angular precision -- a capability requiring either a major KM3NeT expansion or the proposed IceCube-Gen2 upgrade in Antarctica. Nevertheless, the blazar association provides, for the first time, a plausible astrophysical framework for the most energetic neutrino ever observed, strengthening the emerging multi-messenger picture in which blazars, gamma-ray bursts, and compact binary mergers collectively account for the diffuse astrophysical neutrino background first established by IceCube in 2013.
- pion photoproduction
- a nuclear reaction in which high-energy protons collide with photons to produce pions, which then decay into neutrinos; a key mechanism in blazar jets