487 research outputs found
Neutrinos: the Key to UHE Cosmic Rays
Observations of ultrahigh energy cosmic rays (UHECR) do not uniquely
determine both the injection spectrum and the evolution model for UHECR sources
- primarily because interactions during propagation obscure the early Universe
from direct observation. Detection of neutrinos produced in those same
interactions, coupled with UHECR results, would provide a full description of
UHECR source properties.Comment: three pages, three figures. corrected typo
Addendum to "Coherent radio pulses from GEANT generated electromagnetic showers in ice"
We reevaluate our published calculations of electromagnetic showers generated
by GEANT 3.21 and the radio frequency pulses they produce in ice. We are
prompted by a recent report showing that GEANT 3.21-modeled showers are
sensitive to internal settings in the electron tracking subroutine. We report
the shower and pulse characteristics obtained with different settings of GEANT
3.21 and with GEANT 4. The default setting of electron tracking in GEANT 3.21
we used in previous work speeds up the shower simulation at the cost of
information near the end of the tracks. We find that settings tracking electron
and positron to lower energy yield a more accurate calculation, a more intense
shower, and proportionately stronger radio pulses at low frequencies. At high
frequencies the relation between shower tracking algorithm and pulse spectrum
is more complex. We obtain radial distributions of shower particles and phase
distributions of pulses from 100 GeV showers that are consistent with our
published results.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Coherent Radio Pulses From GEANT Generated Electromagnetic Showers In Ice
Radio Cherenkov radiation is arguably the most efficient mechanism for
detecting showers from ultra-high energy particles of 1 PeV and above. Showers
occuring in Antarctic ice should be detectable at distances up to 1 km. We
report on electromagnetic shower development in ice using a GEANT Monte Carlo
simulation. We have studied energy deposition by shower particles and
determined shower parameters for several different media, finding agreement
with published results where available. We also report on radio pulse emission
from the charged particles in the shower, focusing on coherent emission at the
Cherenkov angle. Previous work has focused on frequencies in the 100 MHz to 1
GHz range. Surprisingly, we find that the coherence regime extends up to tens
of Ghz. This may have substantial impact on future radio-based neutrino
detection experiments as well as any test beam experiment which seeks to
measure coherent Cherenkov radiation from an electromagnetic shower. Our study
is particularly important for the RICE experiment at the South Pole.Comment: 44 pages, 29 figures. Minor changes made, reference added, accepted
for publication in Phys. Rev.
Model Independent Predictions of Big Bang Nucleosynthesis from \he4 and \li7: Consistency and Implications
We examine in detail how BBN theory is constrained, and what predictions it
can make, when using only the most model-independent observational constraints.
We avoid the uncertainties and model-dependencies that necessarily arise when
solar neighborhood D and \he3 abundances are used to infer primordial D and
\he3 via chemical and stellar evolution models. Instead, we use \he4 and \li7,
thoroughly examining the effects of possible systematic errors in each. Via a
likelihood analysis, we find near perfect agreement between BBN theory and the
most model-independent data. Given this agreement, we then {\it assume} the
correctness of BBN to set limits on the single parameter of standard BBN, the
baryon-to-photon ratio, and to predict the primordial D and \he3 abundances. We
also repeat our analysis including recent measurements of D/H from quasar
absorption systems and find that the near perfect agreement between theory and
observation of the three isotopes, D, \he4 and \li7 is maintained. These
results have strong implications for the chemical and stellar evolution of the
light elements, in particular for \he3. In addition, our results (especially if
the D/H measurements are confirmed) have implications for the stellar depletion
of \li7. Finally, we set limits on the number \nnu\ of neutrino flavors, using
an analysis which carefully and systematically includes all available
experimental constraints. The value \nnu = 3.0 fits best with BBN and a 95\% CL
upper limit of \nnu \la 4 is established.Comment: 28 pages, latex, 10 ps figure
Radio-Frequency Measurements of Coherent Transition and Cherenkov Radiation: Implications for High-Energy Neutrino Detection
We report on measurements of 11-18 cm wavelength radio emission from
interactions of 15.2 MeV pulsed electron bunches at the Argonne Wakefield
Accelerator. The electrons were observed both in a configuration where they
produced primarily transition radiation from an aluminum foil, and in a
configuration designed for the electrons to produce Cherenkov radiation in a
silica sand target. Our aim was to emulate the large electron excess expected
to develop during an electromagnetic cascade initiated by an ultra high-energy
particle. Such charge asymmetries are predicted to produce strong coherent
radio pulses, which are the basis for several experiments to detect high-energy
neutrinos from the showers they induce in Antarctic ice and in the lunar
regolith. We detected coherent emission which we attribute both to transition
and possibly Cherenkov radiation at different levels depending on the
experimental conditions. We discuss implications for experiments relying on
radio emission for detection of electromagnetic cascades produced by ultra
high-energy neutrinos.Comment: updated figure 10; fixed typo in equation 2.2; accepted by PR
Nucleon Spin Fluctuations and the Supernova Emission of Neutrinos and Axions
In the hot and dense medium of a supernova (SN) core, the nucleon spins
fluctuate so fast that the axial-vector neutrino opacity and the axion
emissivity are expected to be significantly modified. Axions with
m_a\alt10^{-2}\,{\rm eV} are not excluded by SN~1987A. A substantial transfer
of energy in neutrino-nucleon () collisions is enabled which may alter
the spectra of SN neutrinos relative to calculations where energy-conserving
collisions had been assumed near the neutrinosphere.Comment: 8 pages. REVTeX. 2 postscript figures, can be included with epsf.
Small modifications of the text, a new "Note Added", and three new
references. To be published in Phys. Rev. Let
A Self-Consistent Approach to Neutral-Current Processes in Supernova Cores
The problem of neutral-current processes (neutrino scattering, pair emission,
pair absorption, axion emission, \etc) in a nuclear medium can be separated
into an expression representing the phase space of the weakly interacting
probe, and a set of dynamic structure functions of the medium. For a
non-relativistic medium we reduce the description to two structure functions
S_A(\o) and S_V(\o) of the energy transfer, representing the axial-vector
and vector interactions. is well determined by the single-nucleon
approximation while may be dominated by multiply interacting nucleons.
Unless the shape of S_A(\o) changes dramatically at high densities,
scattering processes always dominate over pair processes for neutrino transport
or the emission of right-handed states. Because the emission of right-handed
neutrinos and axions is controlled by the same medium response functions, a
consistent constraint on their properties from consideration of supernova
cooling should use the same structure functions for both neutrino transport and
exotic cooling mechanisms.Comment: 33 pages, Te
IceCube sensitivity for low-energy neutrinos from nearby supernovae
This paper describes the response of the IceCube neutrino telescope located at the geographic south pole to outbursts of MeV neutrinos from the
core collapse of nearby massive stars. IceCube was completed in December 2010 forming a lattice of 5160 photomultiplier tubes that monitor a
volume of ∼1 km3 in the deep Antarctic ice for particle induced photons. The telescope was designed to detect neutrinos with energies greater than
100 GeV. Owing to subfreezing ice temperatures, the photomultiplier dark noise rates are particularly low. Hence IceCube can also detect large
numbers of MeV neutrinos by observing a collective rise in all photomultiplier rates on top of the dark noise. With 2 ms timing resolution, IceCube
can detect subtle features in the temporal development of the supernova neutrino burst. For a supernova at the galactic center, its sensitivity
matches that of a background-free megaton-scale supernova search experiment. The sensitivity decreases to 20 standard deviations at the galactic
edge (30 kpc) and 6 standard deviations at the Large Magellanic Cloud (50 kpc). IceCube is sending triggers from potential supernovae to the
Supernova Early Warning System. The sensitivity to neutrino properties such as the neutrino hierarchy is discussed, as well as the possibility to detect the neutronization burst, a short outbreak of νe ’s released by electron capture on protons soon after collapse. Tantalizing signatures, such as
the formation of a quark star or a black hole as well as the characteristics of shock waves, are investigated to illustrate IceCube’s capability for
supernova detection
Propagation of ultra-high energy protons in regular extragalactic magnetic fields
We study the proton flux expected from sources of ultra high energy cosmic
rays (UHECR) in the presence of regular extragalactic magnetic fields. It is
assumed that a local source of ultra-high energy protons and the magnetic field
are all in a wall of matter concentration with dimensions characteristic of the
supergalactic plane. For a single source, the observed proton flux and the
local cosmic ray energy spectrum depend strongly on the strength of the field,
the position of the observer, and the orientation of the field relative to the
observer's line of sight. Regular fields also affect protons emitted by sources
outside the local magnetic fields structure. We discuss the possibility that
such effects could contribute to an explanation of the excess of UHECR above
eV, and the possibility that sources of such particles may be
missed if such magnetic fields are not taken into account.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures Comments for revised version: 12 pages, 12
figures. Enlarged discussion of effects on cosmic ray spectrum. Additional
discussion focussing on spatial and temporal boundary condition
Neutrinos from propagation of ultra-high energy protons
We present a calculation of the production of neutrinos during propagation of
ultra-high energy cosmic rays from their astrophysical sources to us.
Photoproduction interactions are modeled with the event generator SOPHIA that
represents very well the experimentally measured particle production cross
sections at accelerator energies. We give the fluxes expected from different
assumptions on cosmic ray source distributions, cosmic ray injection spectra,
cosmological evolution of the sources and different cosmologies, and compare
them to the Waxman-Bahcall limit on source neutrinos. We estimate rates for
detection of neutrino induced showers in a km3 water detector. The ratio of the
local high energy neutrino flux to the ultra-high energy cosmic ray flux is a
crucial parameter in distinguishing between astrophysical and cosmological
(top-down) scenarios of the ultra-high energy cosmic ray origin.Comment: 11 pages, revtex, 10 ps figures, extensively revised version, error
in numerical calculation corrected, author adde
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