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             Neutrinos 
					are products of nuclear reactions, the collisions of subatomic 
					protons and neutrons that fuel the sun and ignite violent 
					deep-space phenomena like supernovas and black holes. The 
					neutrinos ejected from the sun carry much less energy than 
					those generated by the furious explosions of dying stars and 
					the voracious appetite of black holes. It's these high-energy 
					neutrinos that AMANDA researchers covet most.
            
            
           
            
             While light and particulate matter produced by such events 
                    interact with gas and dust clouds on their astral voyages, 
                    neutrinos pass through space unmolested. They even escape 
                    the magnetic fields that bend the path of charged particles, 
                    hopelessly obscuring their point of origin. Ejected from celestial 
                    events millions of light-years away, these cosmic messengers 
                    bring news of far-flung galactic incidents, offering clues 
                    to the evolution and structure of the universe itself.
            
            
           
            
             For example, scientists confirmed that neutrinos came from 
					supernova explosionsthe cataclysmic death of massive 
					starswhen a hail of neutrinos showed up hours before 
					a supernova was observed in a nearby galaxy. Escaping the 
					mayhem of the drama unscathed, neutrinos testified to the 
					circumstances of the giant star's death.
            
            
           
            
             AMANDA researchers are also on the lookout for evidence of 
					"neutralinos," the primary suspect for the baffling "missing 
					mass" in the universe known as dark matter. Neutralinos, like 
					neutrinos, rarely interact with matter, but they get trapped 
					in gravity centers, like the Earth's core. They're more likely 
					to collide in these high concentrations, and when they do, 
					theorists predict, they'll produce high-energy neutrinos.
            
            
           
             
            
           
           
             
            
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