Record-Breaking Neutrino Detected by Deep-Sea Telescope
The KM3NeT telescope in the Mediterranean has observed the most energetic neutrino ever recorded, providing new insights into extreme cosmic phenomena.
- The neutrino, detected in February 2023, carried an unprecedented energy of 220 peta-electronvolts (PeV), far surpassing previous records.
- The discovery was made by the Kilometer Cubic Neutrino Telescope (KM3NeT), located more than 1.5 miles beneath the Mediterranean Sea.
- Scientists spent two years analyzing and verifying the data before announcing the finding in the journal *Nature* on February 12, 2025.
- This detection opens a new chapter in neutrino astronomy, offering a glimpse into ultra-high-energy phenomena such as cosmic accelerators or interactions involving the Big Bang's remnants.
- The KM3NeT telescope, still under construction, demonstrated its potential despite being only 10% complete at the time of the detection.





















