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Blazar population may power record energy neutrino
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Blazar population may power record energy neutrino

by Erica Marchand
Paris, France (SPX) Mar 09, 2026
Three years ago, the KM3NeT/ARCA neutrino detector in the Mediterranean Sea recorded the passage of an ultra-energetic cosmic neutrino, the most energetic neutrino ever detected, with an energy of about 220 PeV, more than an order of magnitude above previously observed high-energy neutrinos. The event drew wide attention because its origin was unknown and challenged existing models for the production of such extreme particles.

A new study by the KM3NeT collaboration, published in the Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics, now suggests that this ultra-high-energy neutrino may have originated from a population of blazars, a class of active galactic nuclei powered by supermassive black holes that launch relativistic plasma jets pointed toward Earth. The work explores whether many extreme accelerators acting together can account for the event, rather than a single dramatic outburst in one object.

KM3NeT/ARCA is a deep-sea neutrino telescope under construction off the coast of Sicily, yet even in its partial configuration it detected the exceptional event on 13 February 2023. At the time, only 21 detection lines were operational, corresponding to roughly 10 percent of the instrument's final volume, but this was sufficient to record the distinctive Cherenkov light produced as secondary particles from the neutrino interaction crossed the seawater and triggered the detector's optical modules.

To investigate the origin of the neutrino, the collaboration adopted an approach similar to forensic analysis, starting from specific hypotheses and then simulating the physical processes that could produce such a signal before comparing the results with the actual observation. One possibility discussed in the community is that ultra-high-energy neutrinos arise when ultra-high-energy cosmic rays interact with the cosmic microwave background radiation, the relic light from the early Universe.

The KM3NeT team focused instead on the alternative that the neutrino was produced within a diffuse flux generated by a population of powerful blazars acting as cosmic accelerators. In this picture, many sources distributed across the sky each contribute a fraction of the total flux, so that the detected particle is one realization of a rare but collective process rather than the product of a single, easily identifiable flare or explosion.

Lead author Meriem Bendahman of INFN Naples explains that several clues point away from a single, sudden source. When neutrinos come from transient events such as flares or explosive outbursts, scientists often search for an electromagnetic counterpart, looking for radio, optical, X-ray, or gamma-ray emission from the same sky region coincident in time with the neutrino detection. For this ultra-high-energy event, no such counterpart was found in follow-up observations.

The lack of an electromagnetic signal does not entirely rule out a point-like origin, but it pushes the analysis toward the idea of a diffuse background built from numerous sources. To test this, the collaboration simulated a realistic blazar population using the open-source AM3 software and adopted physically motivated parameter choices. Many aspects of the model, such as the magnetic field strength and the size of the emission region, were fixed using values already constrained by independent observations of blazars.

In their simulations, the researchers concentrated on varying two key parameters that directly affect neutrino production: the baryonic loading and the proton spectral index. The baryonic loading measures how much energy the source channels into protons compared with electrons, and thus controls how many neutrinos can be produced in hadronic interactions. The proton spectral index describes how the proton energy is distributed and how efficiently the source can accelerate particles to extreme energies.

For each combination of these parameters, the team calculated both the resulting diffuse neutrino flux and the associated gamma-ray emission expected from the blazar population. They then compared these model predictions with existing observational data sets to determine which scenarios remain viable without conflicting with what current instruments have or have not seen.

An important strength of the work is its multi-instrument strategy, which combines data from KM3NeT/ARCA with measurements from the IceCube Neutrino Observatory and the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope. The analysis makes use not only of detected events but also of the absence of similar ultra-high-energy neutrinos in long-term IceCube data, which implies that such extreme events must be very rare. Any successful model must therefore produce the observed KM3NeT event without over-predicting additional events that would already have been seen.

Because neutrino production in astrophysical environments is generally accompanied by gamma-ray emission, the researchers also checked that the simulated blazar population does not overshoot the extragalactic gamma-ray background measured by Fermi. This additional constraint ensures that the proposed blazar contribution remains compatible with the overall gamma-ray sky and does not inject more high-energy photons than observations allow.

Within this framework, the team finds that a population of blazars with realistic physical parameters can indeed account for the ultra-high-energy neutrino while remaining consistent with both gamma-ray and neutrino observational limits. The result positions blazars as plausible sources of the KM3-230213A event and supports the broader idea that they can accelerate particles to energies even higher than previously established.

Despite the promising outcome, the authors emphasize that the blazar population scenario remains a hypothesis that must be tested with additional data. KM3NeT is still being built, and the ultra-high-energy neutrino was detected with only a fraction of the final detector volume, limiting the statistical power of the current analysis and leaving room for alternative interpretations as more events are collected.

As construction progresses and the full KM3NeT array comes online, the collaboration expects to perform more sensitive searches for ultra-high-energy neutrinos and refine the connection between these particles and candidate astrophysical accelerators. A larger sample of events will allow more rigorous statistical tests of the blazar population model and may reveal whether other classes of sources also contribute significantly at the highest energies.

If future observations confirm that blazars can produce neutrinos at energies exceeding 200 PeV, it would mark a major step in understanding how supermassive black holes and their jets accelerate particles to extreme energies. Such a result would help to map the most powerful accelerators in the Universe and clarify the role of active galactic nuclei in shaping the high-energy neutrino sky.

Research Report:Blazars as a Potential Origin of the KM3-230213A Event

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