2 February 2026 – The KM3NeT Collaboration gathered last week in the historic heart of Valencia, Spain, for the first Collaboration Meeting of 2026.
The meeting served as an important hub for researchers to discuss the latest data from the ARCA and ORCA detectors, coordinate upcoming sea campaigns, and share progress on neutrino oscillation and multi-messenger astrophysics analyses.
During the meeting, the KM3NeT Collaboration was pleased to welcome Ruhr-Universität Bochum (Germany) and University of Turku (Finland), with research teams led respectively by Anna Franckoviak and Elina Lindfors, as our newest observer institutes.
Additionally, the Valencia meeting saw the announcement of the latest winners of the Giorgos Androulakis Prize, which is assigned for recognizing exceptional dedication and achievements by early-career scientists and technicians and engineers
2 February 2026 – During the recent KM3NeT collaboration meeting in Valencia, the awardees of the third edition of the Giorgos Androulakis Prize were announced.
With this prize, KM3NeT recognises “exceptional contribution to the KM3NeT project that has a particularly high impact on the success or progress of KM3NeT”.
The prize is named after Giorgos Androulakis, the late KM3NeT Quality Manager, in order to commemorate Giorgos’ dedication to the project. The prize is awarded in two categories: Early-Career Scientists and Technicians & Engineers.
The competition this year was so hard that the award committees decided to give the prize to two winners in each category. The awardees of the third edition of the KM3NeT Giorgos Androulakis Prize are:
in the category Early Career Scientists: Alfonso Garcia Soto and Lizeth Morales Gallegos
in the category Technicians and Engineers: Irene Sgura and Alexander Enzenhöfer
Here are exerpts from the motivations of the awards:
Alfonso Garcia Soto – Alfonso not only has a broad overview of neutrino physics, in KM3NeT but also in other experiments including T2K and IceCube, but he is also a leader in these activities. He has taken initiatives such as improving high-energy neutrino simulations in GENIE, developing BDTs for astronomy event selection, and he was an early developer of the Aanet framework for diffuse and point-like sources. He is co-convener of the DM/Exotics group, and particularly valued by his colleagues as a mentor to master and PhD students.
Lizeth Morales Gallegos – Liz has established the complex QA/QC framework for the Caserta multi-integration site (one of the most prominent within the collaboration) as well as for the European Central Storage facility at the Capacity Laboratory, where thousands of components are prepared, inspected, and dispatched to integration sites all across Europe. She has also joined the KM3NeT Project Office as the KM3NeT QA/QC Officer. Her role within KM3NeT is truly central, and her work is highly valued and appreciated.
Irene Sgura – Irene has been deeply committed to KM3NeT since the very early days of the project. She played a pioneering role in structuring and organising key project processes, from risk management to DU and BM coordination, at moments when much of this had to be invented rather than applied. Beyond these aspects, her dedication has been total: she has worked essentially full time for KM3NeT, with an intensity and constancy that remained unchanged throughout the years. Finally, Irene stands out for how pleasant she is to work with. She consistently maintains constructive and positive working relationships, and contributes to a collaborative atmosphere throughout daily interactions.
Alexander Enzenhöfer – For many years now, Alexander has been responsible for the operation and data taking of ORCA. His role has been absolutely pivotal for ORCA and for KM3NeT as a whole. He is one of those people who, quite literally, represent a “single point of failure” for the project; because his expertise, reliability and presence are so central to its functioning. With an exceptional level of commitment, he ensures continuity of operations with an availability that is close to 24/7, year after year. His role is crucial, and he performs it with remarkable efficiency and consistency. Without his long-term dedication and his constant involvement, it would simply not have been possible for ORCA and KM3NeT to reach their current level of performance and stability.
Congratulations to Alfonso, Liz, Irene and Alexander, with many thanks for your dedication to KM3NeT!
The award ceremony in Valencia – standing, from left to right: Alfonso Garcia Soto, Lizeth Morales Gallegos, Paul de Jong (KM3NeT spokesperson), Vincent Bertin (receiving the prize on behalf of Alexander Enzenhöfer), Irene Sgura
On the 31st of December 2025, the EU-funded project KM3NeT-INFRADEV2 came to an end. During 3 years (2023-2025), it provided strong support towards the full implementation of the KM3NeT Research Infrastructure (RI).
The objectives of KM3NeT-INFRADEV2 were multi-fold and divided into dedicated work packages (WPs): prepare a legal entity for the KM3NeT RI (WP2); accelerate the construction of the detector (WP3); develop data management and Open science practices (WP4); and demonstrate KM3NeT as a role-model RI in terms of socio-economic impact and sustainability (WP5).
The work carried out in each WP allowed for the achievement of major milestones for the KM3NeT Collaboration: the creation of the KM3NeT AISBL as the legal entity; the establishment of processes for the safe and efficient construction and operation of the telescope; the implementation of a data environment adapted to pluridisciplinary research and in line with FAIR principles; and the adoption of measures to enhance the socio-economic of KM3NeT and to reduce its environmental impact. All KM3NeT-INFRADEV2 outputs are made public on our website in order to disseminate the results of the project and so they can benefit the scientific community beyond the Collaboration. Moreover, these results will be continuously exploited to ensure the sustainable operation of KM3NeT and strengthen its scientific impact.
The project also provided the Collaboration with additional human and economic resources, allowing in particular for the recruitment of dedicated staff; reminding the constant support of the European Union in favour of KM3NeT, since the beginning of its Design study, in 2006. The end of KM3NeT-INFRADEV2, along with the establishment of the KM3NeT AISBL, also offers KM3NeT a graceful exit of the ESFRI Roadmap (2016-2025) and makes KM3NeT a strong candidate to become an ESFRI landmark.
Thanks to the teams involved for their work towards the full implementation of the KM3NeT RI!
26th January 2026 – The 2026 KM3NeT Bootcamp was held at the Faculty of Science, in Granada, from January 20th to January 23rd, bringing together newcomers to the collaboration for an intensive introduction to KM3NeT.
Over the course of the bootcamp, the participants explored the structure and organisation of the KM3NeT collaboration, along with the detector design and its technical aspects. The programme combined introductory lectures with hands-on sessions, allowing the attendees to gain practical experience with software and computing tools, calibration procedures, data processing and data quality, simulations.
The agenda also covered key physics topics within the KM3NeT scientific programme, including astronomy, neutrino oscillations, dark-matter searches, and cosmic rays. In addition, the participants were introduced to collaboration duties such as data-taking shifts and outreach activities, underlining the importance of contributing both to KM3NeT operations and to its engagement with the broader community.
Even more than an introductory course, the KM3NeT Bootcamp 2026 served as a welcoming gateway into the collaboration, encouraging participants to actively contribute to the future of the experiment.
We warmly thank the local organizers and the Faculty of Science in Granada for their excellent support in hosting this successful event.
Group photo of participants at the KM3NeT Bootcamp alongside a triplet of ANTARES optical modulesParticipants engaged in a hands-on session at the KM3NeT Bootcamp
Congratulations to Ricardo Andrés Jaimes Campos (IFIC, CSIC–UV) for winning a poster prize at the TAE Workshop on High Energy Physics held in Benasque, Spain.
15 September 2025 – We warmly congratulate Luc Cerisy (Aix-Marseille Université / CNRS Marseille), who has been awarded the 2024 GNN Dissertation Prize for his doctoral thesis: “First tau neutrino appearance, non-unitary mixing and absolute orientation measurements in KM3NeT”. Read more