Abstract

The ANTARES neutrino telescope took high-quality data for over 15 years, starting in 2007 and ending its operations in 2022. During this period, it was the most sensitive detector for cosmic neutrino fluxes from the Southern Sky below 100 TeV, where significant neutrino emissions induced by galactic cosmic rays are expected. In addition, it showed the great potential of under-water neutrino telescopes in various searches involving atmospheric neutrinos and neutrinos from dark matter annihilation and/or decays. This contribution provides an overview of the results achieved over these 15 years and an outlook concerning what is still to come once the analysis of its data will be finalised.

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