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Testing Lorentz invariance with neutrino bursts from supernova neutronization

Abstract

Quantum-gravity (QG) effects might generate Lorentz invariance violation by the interaction of energetic particles with the foamy structure of the space-time. As a consequence, particles may not travel at the universal speed of light. We propose to constrain Lorentz invariance violation for energetic neutrinos exploiting the νe\nu_e neutronization burst from the next galactic supernova (SN). This prompt signal is expected to produce a sharp peak in the SN νe\nu_e light curve with a duration of 25\sim 25 ms. However presence of energy-dependent Lorentz invariance violation would significantly spread out the time structure of this signal. We find that the detection the SN νe\nu_e burst from a typical galactic explosion at d=10d=10 kpc in a Mton-class water Cerenkov detector, would be sensitive to a quantum-gravity mass scale MQG1012M_{\rm QG} \sim 10^{12} GeV (2×1052 \times10^{5} GeV) for the linear (quadratic) energy dependence of Lorentz invariance violation. These limits are rather independent of the neutrino mass hierarchy and whether the neutrino velocity is super or subluminal.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, Revised version. Minor changes. Matches published versio

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