44 research outputs found
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Spectroscopy of geo-neutrinos from 2056 days of Borexino data
We report an improved geo-neutrino measurement with Borexino from 2056 days
of data taking. The present exposure is
protonyr. Assuming a chondritic Th/U mass ratio of 3.9, we obtain geo-neutrino events. The null
observation of geo-neutrinos with Borexino alone has a probability of (5.9). A geo-neutrino signal from the mantle is
obtained at 98\% C.L. The radiogenic heat production for U and Th from the
present best-fit result is restricted to the range 23-36 TW, taking into
account the uncertainty on the distribution of heat producing elements inside
the Earth.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Probing thermonuclear supernova explosions with neutrinos
Aims: We present neutrino light curves and energy spectra for two
representative type Ia supernova explosion models: a pure deflagration and a
delayed detonation. Methods: We calculate the neutrino flux from
processes using nuclear statistical equilibrium abundances convoluted with
approximate neutrino spectra of the individual nuclei and the thermal neutrino
spectrum (pair+plasma). Results: Although the two considered thermonuclear
supernova explosion scenarios are expected to produce almost identical
electromagnetic output, their neutrino signatures appear vastly different,
which allow an unambiguous identification of the explosion mechanism: a pure
deflagration produces a single peak in the neutrino light curve, while the
addition of the second maximum characterizes a delayed-detonation. We
identified the following main contributors to the neutrino signal: (1) weak
electron neutrino emission from electron captures (in particular on the protons
Co55 and Ni56) and numerous beta-active nuclei produced by the thermonuclear
flame and/or detonation front, (2) electron antineutrinos from positron
captures on neutrons, and (3) the thermal emission from pair annihilation. We
estimate that a pure deflagration supernova explosion at a distance of 1 kpc
would trigger about 14 events in the future 50 kt liquid scintillator detector
and some 19 events in a 0.5 Mt water Cherenkov-type detector. Conclusions:
While in contrast to core-collapse supernovae neutrinos carry only a very small
fraction of the energy produced in the thermonuclear supernova explosion, the
SN Ia neutrino signal provides information that allows us to unambiguously
distinguish between different possible explosion scenarios. These studies will
become feasible with the next generation of proposed neutrino observatories.Comment: Version accepted to Astronomy&Astrophysics. See
http://ribes.if.uj.edu.pl/snIa for related animations and numerical dat
New results on solar neutrino fluxes from 192 days of Borexino data
We report the direct measurement of the ^7Be solar neutrino signal rate
performed with the Borexino detector at the Laboratori Nazionali del Gran
Sasso. The interaction rate of the 0.862 MeV ^7Be neutrinos is
49+-3(stat)+-4(syst) counts/(day * 100ton). The hypothesis of no oscillation
for ^7Be solar neutrinos is inconsistent with our measurement at the 4sigma
level. Our result is the first direct measurement of the survival probability
for solar nu_e in the transition region between matter-enhanced and
vacuum-driven oscillations. The measurement improves the experimental
determination of the flux of ^7Be, pp, and CNO solar nu_e, and the limit on the
magnetic moment of neutrinos
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Lifetime measurements of 214Po and 212Po with the CTF liquid scintillator detector at LNGS
We have studied the alpha decays of 214Po into 210Pb and of 212Po into 208Pb
tagged by the coincidence with the preceding beta decays from 214Bi and 212Bi,
respectively. The employed 222Rn, 232Th, and 220Rn sources were sealed inside
quartz vials and inserted in the Counting Test Facility at the underground Gran
Sasso National Laboratory in Italy. We find that the mean lifetime of 214Po is
(236.00 +- 0.42(stat) +- 0.15(syst)) \mu s and that of 212Po is (425.1 +-
0.9(stat) +- 1.2(syst)) ns. Our results, obtained from data with
signal-to-background ratio larger than 1000, reduce the overall uncertainties
and are compatible with previous measurements.Comment: RevTex, 11 pages, 5 figures, 3 tables. This second version matches
the one accepted for publication in EPJA: minor stylistic changes plus a
discussion of calibration of TDC time scal
Background free search for neutrinoless double beta decay with GERDA Phase II
The Standard Model of particle physics cannot explain the dominance of matter
over anti-matter in our Universe. In many model extensions this is a very
natural consequence of neutrinos being their own anti-particles (Majorana
particles) which implies that a lepton number violating radioactive decay named
neutrinoless double beta () decay should exist. The detection
of this extremely rare hypothetical process requires utmost suppression of any
kind of backgrounds.
The GERDA collaboration searches for decay of Ge
(^{76}\rm{Ge} \rightarrow\,^{76}\rm{Se} + 2e^-) by operating bare detectors
made from germanium with enriched Ge fraction in liquid argon. Here, we
report on first data of GERDA Phase II. A background level of
cts/(keVkgyr) has been achieved which is the world-best if
weighted by the narrow energy-signal region of germanium detectors. Combining
Phase I and II data we find no signal and deduce a new lower limit for the
half-life of yr at 90 % C.L. Our sensitivity of
yr is competitive with the one of experiments with
significantly larger isotope mass.
GERDA is the first experiment that will be background-free
up to its design exposure. This progress relies on a novel active veto system,
the superior germanium detector energy resolution and the improved background
recognition of our new detectors. The unique discovery potential of an
essentially background-free search for decay motivates a
larger germanium experiment with higher sensitivity.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures, 1 table; ; data, figures and images available at
http://www.mpi-hd.mpg/gerda/publi