26 research outputs found

    Recent results from Borexino on solar neutrinos

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    International audienceBorexino has been a neutrino detector based on ultrapure liquid scintillator, located at the Laboratori Nazionali del Gran Sasso, Italy. Its main scientific goal was the real-time measurement of solar neutrino fluxes, which play an irreplaceable role for the comprehension of the mechanisms powering our star. Over the past two years, the Borexino collaboration has pursued the improvement of the CNO flux measurement, obtaining further indications about the solar metallicity. In a parallel way, Borexino has demonstrated for the first time the possibility of exploiting the directional Cherenkov information, in a liquid scintillator detector, for the detection of sub-MeV solar neutrinos

    Recent results from Borexino on solar neutrinos

    No full text
    International audienceBorexino has been a neutrino detector based on ultrapure liquid scintillator, located at the Laboratori Nazionali del Gran Sasso, Italy. Its main scientific goal was the real-time measurement of solar neutrino fluxes, which play an irreplaceable role for the comprehension of the mechanisms powering our star. Over the past two years, the Borexino collaboration has pursued the improvement of the CNO flux measurement, obtaining further indications about the solar metallicity. In a parallel way, Borexino has demonstrated for the first time the possibility of exploiting the directional Cherenkov information, in a liquid scintillator detector, for the detection of sub-MeV solar neutrinos

    Improved measurement of solar neutrinos from the Carbon-Nitrogen-Oxygen cycle by Borexino and its implications for the Standard Solar Model

    No full text
    We present an improved measurement of the CNO solar neutrino interaction rate at Earth obtained with the complete Borexino Phase-III dataset. The measured rate RCNO_{\rm CNO} = 6.70.8+2.06.7^{+2.0}_{-0.8} counts/(day \cdot 100 tonnes), allows us to exclude the absence of the CNO signal with about 7σ\sigma C.L. The correspondent CNO neutrino flux is 6.60.9+2.0×1086.6^{+2.0}_{-0.9} \times 10^8 cm2^{-2} s1^{-1}, taking into account the neutrino flavor conversion. We use the new CNO measurement to evaluate the C and N abundances in the Sun with respect to the H abundance for the first time with solar neutrinos. Our result of NCNN_{\rm CN} = (5.781.00+1.86)×104(5.78^{+1.86}_{-1.00})\times10^{-4} displays a \sim2σ\sigma tension with the "low metallicity" spectroscopic photospheric measurements. On the other hand, our result used together with the 7^7Be and 8^8B solar neutrino fluxes, also measured by Borexino, permits to disfavour at 3.1σ\sigma C.L. the "low metallicity" SSM B16-AGSS09met as an alternative to the "high metallicity" SSM B16-GS98

    Improved measurement of solar neutrinos from the Carbon-Nitrogen-Oxygen cycle by Borexino and its implications for the Standard Solar Model

    No full text
    We present an improved measurement of the CNO solar neutrino interaction rate at Earth obtained with the complete Borexino Phase-III dataset. The measured rate RCNO_{\rm CNO} = 6.70.8+2.06.7^{+2.0}_{-0.8} counts/(day \cdot 100 tonnes), allows us to exclude the absence of the CNO signal with about 7σ\sigma C.L. The correspondent CNO neutrino flux is 6.60.9+2.0×1086.6^{+2.0}_{-0.9} \times 10^8 cm2^{-2} s1^{-1}, taking into account the neutrino flavor conversion. We use the new CNO measurement to evaluate the C and N abundances in the Sun with respect to the H abundance for the first time with solar neutrinos. Our result of NCNN_{\rm CN} = (5.781.00+1.86)×104(5.78^{+1.86}_{-1.00})\times10^{-4} displays a \sim2σ\sigma tension with the "low metallicity" spectroscopic photospheric measurements. On the other hand, our result used together with the 7^7Be and 8^8B solar neutrino fluxes, also measured by Borexino, permits to disfavour at 3.1σ\sigma C.L. the "low metallicity" SSM B16-AGSS09met as an alternative to the "high metallicity" SSM B16-GS98

    Improved measurement of solar neutrinos from the Carbon-Nitrogen-Oxygen cycle by Borexino and its implications for the Standard Solar Model

    No full text
    We present an improved measurement of the CNO solar neutrino interaction rate at Earth obtained with the complete Borexino Phase-III dataset. The measured rate RCNO_{\rm CNO} = 6.70.8+2.06.7^{+2.0}_{-0.8} counts/(day \cdot 100 tonnes), allows us to exclude the absence of the CNO signal with about 7σ\sigma C.L. The correspondent CNO neutrino flux is 6.60.9+2.0×1086.6^{+2.0}_{-0.9} \times 10^8 cm2^{-2} s1^{-1}, taking into account the neutrino flavor conversion. We use the new CNO measurement to evaluate the C and N abundances in the Sun with respect to the H abundance for the first time with solar neutrinos. Our result of NCNN_{\rm CN} = (5.781.00+1.86)×104(5.78^{+1.86}_{-1.00})\times10^{-4} displays a \sim2σ\sigma tension with the "low metallicity" spectroscopic photospheric measurements. On the other hand, our result used together with the 7^7Be and 8^8B solar neutrino fluxes, also measured by Borexino, permits to disfavour at 3.1σ\sigma C.L. the "low metallicity" SSM B16-AGSS09met as an alternative to the "high metallicity" SSM B16-GS98

    Improved measurement of solar neutrinos from the Carbon-Nitrogen-Oxygen cycle by Borexino and its implications for the Standard Solar Model

    No full text
    We present an improved measurement of the CNO solar neutrino interaction rate at Earth obtained with the complete Borexino Phase-III dataset. The measured rate RCNO_{\rm CNO} = 6.70.8+2.06.7^{+2.0}_{-0.8} counts/(day \cdot 100 tonnes), allows us to exclude the absence of the CNO signal with about 7σ\sigma C.L. The correspondent CNO neutrino flux is 6.60.9+2.0×1086.6^{+2.0}_{-0.9} \times 10^8 cm2^{-2} s1^{-1}, taking into account the neutrino flavor conversion. We use the new CNO measurement to evaluate the C and N abundances in the Sun with respect to the H abundance for the first time with solar neutrinos. Our result of NCNN_{\rm CN} = (5.781.00+1.86)×104(5.78^{+1.86}_{-1.00})\times10^{-4} displays a \sim2σ\sigma tension with the "low metallicity" spectroscopic photospheric measurements. On the other hand, our result used together with the 7^7Be and 8^8B solar neutrino fluxes, also measured by Borexino, permits to disfavour at 3.1σ\sigma C.L. the "low metallicity" SSM B16-AGSS09met as an alternative to the "high metallicity" SSM B16-GS98

    The Low Polonium Field of Borexino and its significance for the CNO neutrino detection

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    International audienceBorexino is a liquid scintillator detector located at the Laboratori Nazionale del Gran Sasso, Italy with the main goal to measure solar neutrinos. The experiment recently provided the first direct experimental evidence of CNO-cycle neutrinos in the Sun, rejecting the no-CNO signal hypothesis with a significance greater than 5σ\sigma at 99%C.L. The intrinsic 210^{210}Bi is an important background for this analysis due to its similar spectral shape to that of CNO neutrinos. 210^{210}Bi can be measured through its daughter 210^{210}Po which can be distinguished through an event-by-event basis via pulse shape discrimination. However, this required reducing the convective motions in the scintillator that brought additional 210^{210}Po from peripheral sources. This was made possible through the thermal insulation and stabilization campaign performed between 2015 and 2016. This article will explain the strategy and the different methods performed to extract the 210^{210}Bi upper limit in Phase-III (Jul 2016- Feb 2020) of the experiment through the analysis of 210^{210}Po in the cleanest region of the detector called the Low Polonium Field

    First detection of CNO neutrinos with Borexino

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    International audienceNeutrinos are elementary particles which are known since many years as fundamental messengers from the interior of the Sun. The Standard Solar Model, which gives a theoretical description of all nuclear processes which happen in our star, predicts that roughly 99% of the energy produced is coming from a series of processes known as the "pp chain". Such processes have been studied in detail over the last years by means of neutrinos, thanks also to the important measurements provided by the Borexino experiment. The remaining 1% is instead predicted to come from a separate loop-process, known as the "CNO cycle". This sub-dominant process is theoretically well understood, but has so far escaped any direct observation. Another fundamental aspect is that the CNO cycle is indeed the main nuclear engine in stars more massive than the Sun. In 2020, thanks to the unprecedented radio-purity and temperature control achieved by the Borexino detector over recent years, the first ever detection of neutrinos from the CNO cycle has been finally announced. The milestone result confirms the existence of this nuclear fusion process in our Universe. Here, the details of the detector stabilization and the analysis techniques adopted are reported

    Methodology used in Borexino for the identification of cosmogenic long-time decay background

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    International audienceBorexino was a liquid scintillator detector situated underground in the Laboratori Nazionali del Gran Sasso in Italy, officially decommissioned in October 2021. Its successful and renowned physics program covered the study of solar neutrinos program and spans also across geo-neutrinos and neutrino physics. Within its solar program, Borexino successfully measured neutrinos from the fusion processes in the pp chain and CNO cycle. For the detection of pep and CNO neutrinos, an especially important background is formed by the cosmogenic radio-isotope 11C that is produced by muon spallation of 12C nuclei in the scintillator. Given the relatively long lifetime (30 mins) and high rate (30 cpd per 100 ton), specific signal identification is not possible. Borexino developed dedicated veto strategies in the data analysis phase to allow the detection of pep and CNO neutrinos. The results presented so far by Borexino relied upon a Three-Fold Coincidence (TFC) technique that exploits the time and space correlation of muons, spallation neutrons, and radioactive 11C decays. This method has conservative assumptions during critical data-taking periods, such as during a board saturation case or between runs, which causes a loss of data exposure. Therefore, a new algorithm is devised to relax these TFC assumptions and deal with the critical periods by searching for space-time correlated bursts of 11C events produced in cascade by the spallation. In this work, we present the state of the art of the TFC, the new algorithm working, and highlight the performance of their combination to deal with the 11C background. Moreover, this method finds a general application in low radioactivity Borexino-like underground experiments when dealing with any background having a decay time too long to be identified by the triggers

    Swift-BAT GUANO follow-up of gravitational-wave triggers in the third LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA observing run

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    International audienceWe present results from a search for X-ray/gamma-ray counterparts of gravitational-wave (GW) candidates from the third observing run (O3) of the LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA (LVK) network using the Swift Burst Alert Telescope (Swift-BAT). The search includes 636 GW candidates received in low latency, 86 of which have been confirmed by the offline analysis and included in the third cumulative Gravitational-Wave Transient Catalogs (GWTC-3). Targeted searches were carried out on the entire GW sample using the maximum--likelihood NITRATES pipeline on the BAT data made available via the GUANO infrastructure. We do not detect any significant electromagnetic emission that is temporally and spatially coincident with any of the GW candidates. We report flux upper limits in the 15-350 keV band as a function of sky position for all the catalog candidates. For GW candidates where the Swift-BAT false alarm rate is less than 103^{-3} Hz, we compute the GW--BAT joint false alarm rate. Finally, the derived Swift-BAT upper limits are used to infer constraints on the putative electromagnetic emission associated with binary black hole mergers
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