Recent results from the Baikal-GVD neutrino telescope
D. Zaborov*,
V.A. Allakhverdyan,
A.D. Avrorin,
A.V. Avrorin,
V.M. Aynutdinov,
Z. Bardačová,
I.A. Belolaptikov, I.V. Borina, N.M. Budnev, V.Y. Dik, G.V. Domogatsky, A.A. Doroshenko, R. Dvornický, A.N. Dyachok, Z.A.M. Dzhilkibaev, E. Eckerová, T.V. Elzhov, L. Fajt, A.R. Gafarov, K.V. Golubkov, N.S. Gorshkov, T.I. Gress, K.G. Kebkal, V.K. Kebkal, A. Khatun, E.V. Khramov, M.M. Kolbin, K.V. Konischev, A.V. Korobchenko, A.P. Koshechkin, V.A. Kozhin, M.V. Kruglov, V.F. Kulepov, Y.M. Malyshkin, M.B. Milenin, R.R. Mirgazov, D.V. Naumov, V. Nazari, D.P. Petukhov, E.N. Pliskovsky, M.I. Rozanov, V.D. Rushay, E.V. Ryabov, G.B. Safronov, B.A. Shaybonov, D. Seitova, M.D. Shelepov, F. Šimkovic, A.E. Sirenko, A.V. Skurikhin, A.G. Solovjev, M.N. Sorokovikov, I. Štekl, A.P. Stromakov, O.V. Suvorova, V.A. Tabolenko, Y.V. Yablokova on behalf of the Baikal-GVD Collaborationet al. (click to show)*: corresponding author
Pre-published on:
November 28, 2022
Published on:
June 15, 2023
Abstract
Baikal-GVD is a large underwater neutrino detector currently under construction in Lake Baikal, Russia. With the detector volume already approaching 0.4 km$^3$ and a sub-degree angular resolution, Baikal-GVD is becoming one of the key players in neutrino astronomy. We review the current status of Baikal-GVD and recent results obtained with the partially complete instrument.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.22323/1.414.0083
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