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Atmospheric neutrinos are produced in air showers, when cosmic ray primaries hit the Earths atmosphere and interact hadronically. The conventional neutrino flux, which dominates the neutrino data measured in the GeV to TeV range by neutrino telescopes, is produced by the decay of charged pions and kaons. Prompt atmospheric neutrinos are produced by the decay of heavier mesons typically containing a charm quark. Their production is strongly suppressed, but they are expected to exhibit a harder energy spectrum. Hence, they could dominate the atmospheric neutrino flux at energies above ~ 100 TeV. Such a prompt atmospheric flux component has not yet been observed. Therefore, it is an interesting signal in a diffuse neutrino search, but also a background in the search for a diffuse astrophysical neutrino flux. The sensitivity of diffuse neutrino searches with the IceCube Neutrino observatory has reached the level of theoretical expectations of prompt neutrino fluxes, and recent results are presented.
A search for sidereal modulation in the flux of atmospheric muon neutrinos in IceCube was performed. Such a signal could be an indication of Lorentz-violating physics. Neutrino oscillation models, derivable from extensions to the Standard Model, allo
The IceCube Neutrino Observatory was designed primarily to search for high-energy (TeV--PeV) neutrinos produced in distant astrophysical objects. A search for $gtrsim 100$~TeV neutrinos interacting inside the instrumented volume has recently provided
The first dedicated search for ultra-high energy (UHE) tau neutrinos of astrophysical origin was performed using the IceCube detector in its 22-string configuration with an instrumented volume of roughly 0.25 km^3. The search also had sensitivity to
We present a measurement of the atmospheric $ u_e$ spectrum at energies between 0.1 TeV and 100 TeV using data from the first year of the complete IceCube detector. Atmospheric $ u_e$ originate mainly from the decays of kaons produced in cosmic-ray a
We report on the observation of two neutrino-induced events which have an estimated deposited energy in the IceCube detector of 1.04 $pm$ 0.16 and 1.14 $pm$ 0.17 PeV, respectively, the highest neutrino energies observed so far. These events are consi