1,493 research outputs found
High energy astrophysics and high altitude laboratories
These are some summary remarks given at the Chacaltaya meeting on cosmic ray physics, held in La Paz (Bolivia), July 23-27, 2000. The meeting covered a wide range of top ics in cosmic ray p hysics and high energy astrop hysics.
This contribution briefly touches on some of the highlights of the meeting, and discusses the important role that high-altitude laboratories can have in the future of these fundamental fields
Gamma astronomy from space
In this contribution I will review the status of Îł-astronomy at energies larger than ⌠30 MeV from satellites. The measurements of the instruments aboard the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory have given a tremendous boost to this field of research, with Îł-rays observed from a wide range of galactic and extra-galactic sources. The missions planned for the near future will be briefly summarized
Neutrino Decay and Atmospheric Neutrinos
We reconsider neutrino decay as an explanation for atmospheric neutrino
observations. We show that if the mass-difference relevant to the two mixed
states \nu_\mu and \nu_\tau is very small (< 10^{-4} eV^2), then a very good
fit to the observations can be obtained with decay of a component of \nu_\mu to
a sterile neutrino and a Majoron. We discuss how the K2K and MINOS
long-baseline experiments can distinguish the decay and oscillation scenarios.Comment: 9 pages, Revtex, uses epsf.sty, 3 postscript figures. Additions and
corrections to references, minor changes in the text and to some number
A 3-Dimensional Calculation of Atmospheric Neutrino Flux
An extensive 3-dimensional Monte Carlo calculation of the atmospheric
neutrino flux is in progress with the FLUKA Monte Carlo code. The results are
compared to those obtained under the 1-dimensional approximation, where
secondary particles and decay products are assumed to be collinear to the
primary cosmic ray, as usually done in most of the already existing flux
calculations. It is shown that the collinear approximation gives rise to a
wrong angular distribution of neutrinos, essentially in the Sub-GeV region.
However, the angular smearing introduced by the experimental inability of
detecting recoils in neutrino interactions with nuclei is large enough to wash
out, in practice, most of the differences between 3-dimensional and
1-dimensional flux calculations. Therefore, the use of the collinear
approximation should have not introduced a significant bias in the
determination of the flavor oscillation parameters in current experiments.Comment: 27 pages, 14 figures. To be submitted to Astroparticle Physics. To be
submitted to Astroparticle Physic
The emission spectrum of the strong Fe II emitter BAL Seyfert 1 galaxy IRAS 07598+6508
The narrow-line Seyfert 1 galaxy IRAS 07598+6508 is known to be a stong Fe II
emitter. The analysis of several high S/N ratio spectra shows that its spectrum
is dominated by a relatively narrow "broad line" region (1 780 km s
FWHM) emitting not only Fe II, but also Ti II and Cr II lines. Although we were
unable to find a completely satisfactory physical model, we got the best
agreement with the observations with collisional rather than radiative models,
with a high density (n=10 cm), a high column density
(N=10 cm) and a microturbulence of 100 km s. This
BLR is qualitatively similar to the one observed in I Zw 1. We have not found
traces in IRAS 07598+6508 of the narrow line regions found in I Zw 1.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures, accepted by A&
A Monte Carlo Calculation of Atmospheric Muon and Neutrino Fluxes
Production of muons and neutrinos in cosmic ray interactions with the
atmosphere has been investigated with a cascade simulation program based on
Lund Monte Carlo programs. The resulting `conventional' muon and neutrino
fluxes (from decays) agree well with earlier calculations, whereas the
improved charm particle treatment used in this study gives significantly lower
`prompt' fluxes compared to earlier estimates. This implies better prospects
for detecting very high energy neutrinos from cosmic sources.Comment: 4 pages, uuencoded and gziped ps-fil
Determining the sign of at long baseline neutrino experiments
Recently it is advocated that high intensity and low energy neutrino beams should be built to probe the mixing angle to
a level of a few parts in . Experiments using such beams will have better
signal to background ratio in searches for oscillations. We
propose that such experiments can also determine the sign of even
if the beam consists of {\it neutrinos} only. By measuring the transitions in two different energy ranges, the effects due to
propagation of neutrinos through earth's crust can be isolated and the sign of
can be determined. If the sensitivity of an experiment to
is , then the same experiment is automatically sensitive to matter
effects and the sign of for values of .Comment: Title changed and paper rewritten. 4 pages, 1 figure, revte
Comparison of 3-Dimensional and 1-Dimensional Schemes in the calculation of Atmospheric Neutrinos
A 3-dimensional calculation of atmospheric neutrinos flux is presented, and
the results are compared with those of a 1-dimensional one. In this study,
interaction and propagation of particles is treated in a 3-dimensional way
including the curvature of charged particles due to the geomagnetic field,
which is assumed to be a dipole field. The purpose of this paper is limited to
the comparison of calculation schemes. The updated flux value with new
interaction model and primary flux model will be reported in a separate paper.
Except for nearly horizontal directions, the flux is very similar to the
result of 1 dimensional calculations. However, for near-horizontal directions
an enhancement of the neutrino flux is seen even at energies as high as 1 GeV.
The production height of neutrinos is lower than the prediction by
1-dimensional calculation for near-horizontal directions, and is a little
higher for near-vertical directions. However, the difference is not evident
except for near-horizontal directions.Comment: 22 pages, 15figure
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