In Part I (in this journal) we argued that the structure function
F2γp(x,Q2) in deep inelastic ep scattering, regarded as a cross
section for virtual γ∗p scattering, has a saturated Froissart-bounded
form behaving as ln2(1/x) at small x. This form provides an excellent
fit to the low x HERA data, including the very low Q2 regions, and can be
extrapolated reliably to small x using the natural variable ln(1/x). We
used our fit to derive quark distributions for values of x down to
x=10−14. We use those distributions here to evaluate ultra-high energy
(UHE) cross sections for neutrino scattering on an isoscalar nucleon,
N=(n+p)/2, up to laboratory neutrino energies Eν∼1016-1017
GeV where there are now limits on neutrino fluxes. We estimate that these cross
sections are accurate to ∼2% at the highest energies considered, with the
major uncertainty coming from the errors in the parameters that were needed to
fit F2γp(x,Q2). We compare our results to recently published
neutrino cross sections derived from NLO parton distribution functions, which
become much larger at high energies because of the use of power-law
extrapolations of quark distributions to small x. We argue that our
calculation of the UHE νN cross sections is the best one can make based
the existing experimental deep inelastic scattering data. Further, we show that
the strong interaction Froissart bound of ln2(1/x) on F2γp
translates to an exact bound of ln3Eν for leading-order-weak νN
scattering. The energy dependence of νN total cross section measurements
consequently has important implications for hadronic interactions at enormous
cms (center-of-mass) energies not otherwise accessible.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures. The paper is now shorter with the new results
clearly emphasize