364 research outputs found
Constraining the absolute neutrino mass scale and Majorana CP violating phases by future neutrinoless double beta decay experiments
Assuming that neutrinos are Majorana particles, in a three generation
framework, current and future neutrino oscillation experiments can determine
six out of the nine parameters which fully describe the structure of the
neutrino mass matrix. We try to clarify the interplay among the remaining
parameters, the absolute neutrino mass scale and two CP violating Majorana
phases, and how they can be accessed by future neutrinoless double beta
() decay experiments, for the normal as well as for the
inverted order of the neutrino mass spectrum. Assuming the oscillation
parameters to be in the range presently allowed by atmospheric, solar, reactor
and accelerator neutrino experiments, we quantitatively estimate the bounds on
, the lightest neutrino mass, that can be infered if the next generation
decay experiments can probe the effective Majorana mass
() down to
1 meV. In this context we conclude that in the case neutrinos are
Majorana particles: (a) if m_0 \gsim 300 meV, {\em i.e.}, within the range
directly attainable by future laboratory experiments as well as astrophysical
observations, then m_{ee} \gsim 30 meV must be observed;
(b) if meV, results from future decay
experiments combined with stringent bounds on the neutrino oscillation
parameters, specially the solar ones, will place much stronger limits on the
allowed values of than these direct experiments.Comment: 26 pages, 11 encapsulated postscript figures. A new figure and minor
changes are included. To be published in Phys. Rev.
Probing supernova physics with neutrino oscillations
We point out that solar neutrino oscillations with large mixing angle as
evidenced in current solar neutrino data have a strong impact on strategies for
diagnosing collapse-driven supernova (SN) through neutrino observations. Such
oscillations induce a significant deformation of the energy spectra of
neutrinos, thereby allowing us to obtain otherwise inaccessible features of SN
neutrino spectra. We demonstrate that one can determine temperatures and
luminosities of non-electron flavor neutrinos by observing bar{nu}_{e} from
galactic SN in massive water Cherenkov detectors by the charged current
reactions on protons.Comment: 6 pages. Typos corrected and references added. Version to be
published in Physics Letters
Neutrinos and Nucleosynthesis in Supernova
The type II supernova is considered as a candidate site for the production of
heavy elements. The nucleosynthesis occurs in an intense neutrino flux, we
calculate the electron fraction in this environment.Comment: RevTex4 style, 3 pages including 1 figure. Presented at Mexican
School of Astrophysics 2002, Guanajuato, Mexico, 31 Jul - 7 Aug 2002. Final
version to appear in the Proceedings of IX Mexican Workshop on Particles and
Fields Physics Beyond the Standard Model, Colima Col. Mexico, November 17-22,
200
Resonant Conversion of Massless Neutrinos in Supernovae
It has been noted for a long time that, in some circumstances, {\sl massless}
neutrinos may be {\sl mixed} in the leptonic charged current. Conventional
neutrino oscillation searches in vacuum are insensitive to this mixing. We
discuss the effects of resonant massless-neutrino conversions in the dense
medium of a supernova. In particular, we show how the detected
energy spectra from SN1987a and the supernova -process nucleosynthesis may
be used to provide very stringent constraints on the mixing of {\sl massless}
neutrinos.Comment: latex file, 20 pages, including 3 postscript figure
Why matter effects matter for JUNO
In this paper we focus on the Earth matter effects for the solar parameter
determination by a medium baseline reactor experiment such as JUNO. We derive
perturbative expansions for the mixing angles and
as well as the and in terms of the matter
potential relevant for JUNO. These expansions, up to second order in the matter
potential, while simple, allow one to calculate the electron antineutrino
survival probability to a precision much better than needed for the JUNO
experiment. We use these perturbative expansions to semi-analytically explain
and confirm the shift caused by the matter effects on the solar neutrino mixing
parameters and which were previously obtained
by a purely numerical analysis. Since these shifts do not satisfy the
naive expectations and are significant given the precision that can be achieved
by the JUNO experiment, a totally independent cross check using a completely
different method is of particular importance. We find that these matter effect
shifts do not depend on any of the details of the detector characteristics
apart from the baseline and earth mass density between reactor(s) and detector,
but do depend on the normalized product of reactor neutrino spectrum times the
inverse-beta decay cross-section. The results of this manuscript suggests an
alternative analysis method for measuring and in JUNO which would be a useful cross check of the standard analysis
and for the understanding of the Wolfenstein matter effect. The explanation of
these shifts together with a quantitative understanding, using a
semi-analytical method, is the principal purpose of this paper.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures. Minor changes and reorganizatio
Angra Neutrino Project: status and plans
We present the status and plans of the Angra Project, a new nuclear reactor
neutrino oscillation experiment, proposed to be built in Brazil at the Angra
dos Reis nuclear reactor complex. This experiment is aimed to measure theta_13,
the last unknown of the three neutrino mixing angles. Combining a high
luminosity design, very low background from cosmic rays and careful control of
systematic errors at the 1% level, we propose a high sensitivity multi-detector
experiment, able to reach a sensitivity to antineutrino disappearance down to
sin^2(2*theta_13) = 0.006 in a three years running period, improving present
limits constrained by the CHOOZ experiment by more than an order of magnitude.Comment: 2 pages, 1 figure, talk presented by J.C. Anjos ([email protected]) at
NuFact05, 21-26 June 2005, Frascati, Ital
Parameter Degeneracy in Flavor-Dependent Reconstruction of Supernova Neutrino Fluxes
We reexamine the possibility of reconstructing the initial fluxes of
supernova neutrinos emitted in a future core-collapse galactic supernova
explosion and detected in a Megaton-sized water Cherenkov detector. A novel key
element in our method is the inclusion, in addition to the total and the
average energies of each neutrino species, of a "pinching" parameter
characterizing the width of the distribution as a fit parameter. We uncover in
this case a continuous degeneracy in the reconstructed parameters of supernova
neutrino fluxes at the neutrinosphere. We analyze in detail the features of
this degeneracy and show how it occurs irrespective of the parametrization used
for the distribution function. Given that this degeneracy is real we briefly
comment on possible steps towards resolving it, which necessarily requires
going beyond the setting presented here.Comment: 28 pages, 37 figures, version with some improvements in the text and
some new references, conclusions unchanged, to appear in JCA
Mass Hierarchy via Mossbauer and Reactor Neutrinos
We show how one could determine the neutrino mass hierarchy with Mossbauer
neutrinos and also revisit the question of whether the hierarchy can be
determined with reactor neutrinos.Comment: contribution to NOW 2008, 3 pages, 4 figures, late
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