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Neutrinos with energies above $10^{17}$ eV are detectable with the Surface Detector Array of the Pierre Auger Observatory. The identification is efficiently performed for neutrinos of all flavors interacting in the atmosphere at large zenith angles, as well as for Earth-skimming $tau$ neutrinos with nearly tangential trajectories relative to the earth. No neutrino candidates were found in $sim,14.7$ years of data taken up to 31 August 2018. This leads to restrictive upper bounds on their flux. The $90%$ C.L. single-flavor limit to the diffuse flux of ultra-high-energy neutrinos with an $E_ u^{-2}$ spectrum in the energy range $1.0 times 10^{17}~{rm eV} - 2.5 times 10^{19}~{rm eV}$ is $E^2 {rm d}N_ u/{rm d}E_ u < 4.4 times 10^{-9}~{rm GeV~cm^{-2}~s^{-1}~sr^{-1}}$, placing strong constraints on several models of neutrino production at EeV energies and on the properties of the sources of ultra-high-energy cosmic rays.
We have searched for extremely high energy neutrinos using data taken with the IceCube detector between May 2010 and May 2012. Two neutrino induced particle shower events with energies around 1 PeV were observed, as reported previously. In this work,
We derive lower bounds on the density of sources of ultra-high energy cosmic rays from the lack of significant clustering in the arrival directions of the highest energy events detected at the Pierre Auger Observatory. The density of uniformly distri
With the Surface Detector array (SD) of the Pierre Auger Observatory we can detect neutrinos with energy between $10^{17},$eV and $10^{20},$eV from point-like sources across the sky, from close to the Southern Celestial Pole up to $60^circ$ in declin
The Pierre Auger Observatory, located in Argentina, provides an unprecedented integrated aperture for the search of photons with energy above 100 PeV. In this contribution recent results are presented including the diffuse search for photons and the
The Pierre Auger Collaboration has reported evidence for anisotropy in the distribution of arrival directions of the cosmic rays with energies $E>E_{th}=5.5times 10^{19}$ eV. These show a correlation with the distribution of nearby extragalactic obje