1,802 research outputs found
How many sigmas is the solar neutrino effect?
The minimal standard electroweak model can be tested by allowing all the
solar neutrino fluxes, with undistorted energy spectra, to be free parameters
in fitting the measured solar neutrino event rates, subject only to the
condition that the total observed luminosity of the sun is produced by nuclear
fusion. The rates of the five experiments prior to SNO (chlorine, Kamiokande,
SAGE, GALLEX, Super-Kamiokande) cannot be fit by an arbitrary choice of
undistorted neutrino fluxes at the level of 2.5 sigma (formally 99% C.L.).
Considering just SNO and Super-Kamiokande, the discrepancy is at the 3.3 sigma
level(10^{-3} C.L.). If all six experiments are fit simultaneously, the formal
discrepancy increases to 4 sigma (7*10^{-5} C.L.). If the relative scaling in
temperature of the nuclear reactions that produce 7Be and 8B neutrinos is taken
into account, the formal discrepancy is at the 7.4 sigma level.Comment: 1 figure; related information at http://www.sns.ias.edu/~jn
Probability of a Solution to the Solar Neutrino Problem Within the Minimal Standard Model
Tests, independent of any solar model, can be made of whether solar neutrino
experiments are consistent with the minimal Standard Model (stable, massless
neutrinos). If the experimental uncertainties are correctly estimated and the
sun is generating energy by light-element fusion in quasi-static equilibrium,
the probability of a standard-physics solution is less than 2%. Even when the
luminosity constraint is abandoned, the probability is not more than 4%. The
sensitivity of the conclusions to input parameters is explored.Comment: PRL, Revtex, 1 figure, 5 page
Non-resonant nuclear reactions at stellar temperatures
Procedure for calculating rates of non-resonant nuclear reactions at stellar temperature
Do Solar Neutrino Experiments Imply New Physics?
None of the 1000 solar models in a full Monte Carlo simulation is consistent
with the results of the chlorine or the Kamiokande experiments. Even if the
solar models are forced artifically to have a \b8 neutrino flux in agreeement
with the Kamiokande experiment, none of the fudged models agrees with the
chlorine observations. The GALLEX and SAGE experiments, which currently have
large statistical uncertainties, differ from the predictions of the standard
solar model by and , respectively.Comment: 7 pages (figures not included), Institute for Advanced Study number
AST 92/51. For a hard copy with the figures, write: [email protected]
Astrophysical neutrinos: 20th Century and Beyond
I summarize the first four decades of solar neutrino research and suggest
what may be possible to learn with extragalactic neutrinos and with solar
neutrinos in the next decade.Comment: IUPAP Centennial Lecture, Neutrino 2000; related information:
http://www.sns.ias.edu/~jn
Solar neutrino interactions: Using charged currents at SNO to tell neutral currents at Super-Kamiokande
In the presence of flavor oscillations, muon and tau neutrinos can contribute
to the Super-Kamiokande (SK) solar neutrino signal through the neutral current
process \nu_{\mu,\tau} e^{-}\to \nu_{\mu,\tau} e^{-}. We show how to separate
the \nu_e and \nu_{\mu,\tau} event rates in SK in a model independent way, by
using the rate of the charged current process \nu_e d \to p p e^{-} from the
Sudbury Neutrino Observatory (SNO) experiment, with an appropriate choice of
the SK and SNO energy thresholds. Under the additional hypothesis of no
oscillations into sterile states, we also show how to determine the absolute
^{8}B neutrino flux from the same data set, independently of the \nu_e survival
probability.Comment: 14 pages (RevTeX), incl. 3 figures (epsf), submitted to Phys. ReV.
Effect of Coulomb collisions on time variations of the solar neutrino flux
We consider the possibility of time variations of the solar neutrino flux due
to the radial motion of the Earth and neutrino interference effects. We
calculate the time variations of the detected neutrino flux and the extent to
which they are suppressed by Coulomb collisions of the neutrino emitting
nuclei. To properly treat the collisions, it is necessary to simultaneously
include in our analysis all other significant physical decoherence effects: the
energy averaging and the averaging over the position of neutrino emission.
A simple and clear physical picture of the time dependent solar neutrino
problem is presented and qualitative coherence criteria are discussed. Exact
results for the detected neutrino flux and its time variations are obtained for
both the case of a solar neutrino line, and the case of the continuous neutrino
spectrum with a Gaussian shape of the energy response function of the neutrino
detector. We give accurate constraints on the vacuum mixing angle and the
neutrino masses required for flux time variations to not be suppressed.
Pac(s): 26.65.+t, 14.60.Pq, 96.60.JwComment: 43 pages, 8 figures, 4 appendices; changed title, MSW jump
probability formula and figure
The luminosity constraint on solar neutrino fluxes
A specific linear combination of the total solar neutrino fluxes must equal
the measured solar photon luminosity if nuclear fusion reactions among light
elements are responsible for solar energy generation. This luminosity
constraint, previously used in a limited form in testing the no neutrino
oscillation hypothesis, is derived in a generality that includes all of the
relevant solar neutrino fluxes and which is suitable for analyzing the results
of many different solar neutrino experiments. With or without allowing for
neutrino oscillations, the generalized luminosity constraint can be used in
future analyses of solar neutrino data. Accurate numerical values for the
linear coefficients are provided.Comment: related material at http://www.sns.ias.edu/~jn
Lithium Experiment on Solar Neutrinos to Weight the CNO Cycle
The measurement of the flux of beryllium neutrinos with the accuracy of about
10% and CNO neutrinos with the accuracy 30% will enable to find the flux of
pp-neutrinos in the source with the accuracy better than 1% using the
luminosity constraint. The future experiments on \nu e- scattering will enable
to measure with very good accuracy the flux of beryllium and pp-neutrinos on
the Earth. The ratio of the flux of pp-neutrinos on the Earth and in the source
will enable to find with very good accuracy a mixing angle theta solar. Lithium
detector has high sensitivity to CNO neutrinos and can find the contribution of
CNO cycle to the energy generated in the Sun. This will be a stringent test of
the theory of stellar evolution and combined with other experiments will
provide a precise determination of the flux of pp-neutrinos in the source and a
mixing angle theta solar. The work on the development of the technology of
lithium experiment is now in progress.Comment: Minor corrections, one reference added, 11 pages, 2 figures, talk
given at NANP 2003, Dubna, Russia, June 200
Current Status of the Solar Neutrino Problem with Super-Kamiokande
We perform an updated model-independent analysis using the latest solar
neutrino data obtained by Cl and Ga radiochemical experiments,
and most notably by a large water-Cherenkov detector SuperKamiokande with their
504 days of data taking. We confirm that the astrophysical solutions to the
solar neutrino problem are extremely disfavored by the data and a
low-temperature modification of the standard solar model is excluded by more
than 5 . We also propose a new way of illuminating the suppression
pattern of various solar neutrino flux without invoking detailed flavor
conversion mechanisms. It indicates that the strong suppression of Be
neutrinos is no more true when the neutrino flavor conversion is taken into
account.Comment: RevTex file, 10 pages, 7 postscript figure
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