We propose the first practical method to detect atmospheric tau neutrino
appearance at sub-GeV energies, which would be an important test of νμ→ντ oscillations and of new-physics scenarios. In the
Jiangmen Underground Neutrino Observatory (JUNO; starts in 2024), active-flavor
neutrinos eject neutrons from carbon via neutral-current quasielastic
scattering. This produces a two-part signal: the prompt part is caused by the
scattering of the neutron in the scintillator, and the delayed part by its
radiative capture. Such events have been observed in KamLAND, but only in small
numbers and were treated as a background. With νμ→ντ
oscillations, JUNO should measure a clean sample of 55 events/yr; with simple
νμ disappearance, this would instead be 41 events/yr, where the latter
is determined from Super-Kamiokande charged-current measurements at similar
neutrino energies. Implementing this method will require precise laboratory
measurements of neutrino-nucleus cross sections or other developments. With
those, JUNO will have 5σ sensitivity to tau-neutrino appearance in 5
years exposure, and likely sooner.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figure