1 / 28

Atmospheric neutrinos

Atmospheric neutrinos. Primary spectrum Hadronic interactions Fluxes of muons and neutrinos Emphasis on high energy. p. p. m. e. n e. n m. Atmospheric neutrino beam. Up-down symmetric except for geomagnetic effects One detector for both long baseline short baseline

Download Presentation

Atmospheric neutrinos

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Atmospheric neutrinos Primary spectrum Hadronic interactions Fluxes of muons and neutrinos Emphasis on high energy Tom Gaisser

  2. p p m e ne nm Atmospheric neutrino beam • Up-down symmetric except for geomagnetic effects • One detector for both • long baseline • short baseline • 1 < L/E < 105 km/GeV • nm/ne ~ 2 for En < GeV at production D. Ayres, A.K. Mann et al., 1982 Tom Gaisser Also V Stenger, DUMAND, 1980

  3. Overview of the calculation Tom Gaisser

  4. Summary of Atmospheric Neutrino Calculations A Tom Gaisser

  5. A C B C/A B/A Comparison of 3 calculations used by Super-K nm + nm • Differences come from • Assumptions about primary spectrum • Treatment of hadronic interactions Y. Ashi et al. (Super-K Collaboration) hep-ex/0501064 Tom Gaisser

  6. Flavor ratio at production • r =nm/ne at production sets background for search for effects of solar and s13 mixing • De = P2(r cos2q23 -1) Peres & Smirnov, 2004 •  0 for r = 2, q23=45o • rsub-GeV ~2.04 – 2.1 Tom Gaisser

  7. Range of n flux calculations Tom Gaisser

  8. Protons Helium Primary spectrum • Largest source of overall uncertainty • 1995: experiments differ by 50% (see lines) • Present: AMS, BESS within 5% for protons • discrepancy for He larger, but He only 20% of nucleon flux • CAPRICE lower by 15-20% Tom Gaisser

  9. Primary spectrum: new standard? • Fit BESS and AMS • Include small contributions from heavy elements • Extrapolate to high E • Use m and n measurements as constraints Tom Gaisser

  10. e (or m) ne (or nm) nm Classes of atmospheric n events m Contained (any direction) n-induced m (from below) Tom Gaisser

  11. Super-K atmospheric neutrino data (hep-ex/0501064) CC ne CC nm 1489day FC+PC data + 1646day upward going muon data Tom Gaisser

  12. Fit 2 flavor mixing: sin2q23 = 1.0 dm2 = 2.1x10-3 eV2 38 parameters represent uncertainties in flux of atmospheric neutrinos Super-K fits Tom Gaisser

  13. nm-induced upward m Super-KAMIOKANDE MACRO Tom Gaisser

  14. High-energy n in Super-K • In Super-K fit, primary spectrum shifts: • Overall normalization up 11% • Slope < 100 GeV changes: -2.74  -2.71 • Slope > 100 GeV changes: -2.71  -2.66 • K/p decreases by 6% • Can we use Super-K measurements (together with muon measurements) to constrain extrapolation of neutrino spectrum to high energy? • Work in progress with P. Lipari, T. Stanev & G. Barr Tom Gaisser

  15. Neutrino response to primary spectrum Primary energy / nucleon Neutrino energy Tom Gaisser

  16. /nucleon) All-nucleon spectrum Tom Gaisser

  17. n = nm + nm Analytic approximations for E>10 GeV Similar forms for muons but … Zpm = 0.67 Tom Gaisser

  18. Atmospheric n-induced m QGSjet 0.167 0.081 0.032 0.028 0.0047 0.0032 No oscillations With oscillations Paolo Lipari calculation with standard Z-factors Tom Gaisser

  19. ----TG calculation, Primary spectrum: N(E) = 1.7 E-2.70 Agrawal et al., PRD53 (1996) 1314 Lipari, standard Z-factors, Primary spectrum: N(E) = 1.75 E-2.71 Vertical muon flux Tom Gaisser

  20. vertical 60 degrees Importance of kaons at high E • Importance of kaons • main source of n > 100 GeV • p  K+ + L important • Charmed analog important for prompt leptons at higher energy Tom Gaisser

  21. Differences in kaon production Tom Gaisser

  22. Comparison of n flux calculations: Importance of K at high energhy A B C Tom Gaisser

  23. n / anti-n ratios Tom Gaisser

  24. histogram : NUSIM histogram : CORSIKA line : Lipari dots: AMANDA-II data line : Bartol Unfolded neutrino energy spectrum (2000) line : Honda ~x2 atmospheric neutrinos Paolo Desiati can we use AMANDA-II atmospheric neutrino data to probe these uncertainties ? E3·dN/dE (cm-2 s-1 sr-1GeV2) Log10(Eν) CORSIKA ~ - 30:50% than NUSIM/Lipari Tom Gaisser

  25. Calibration with atmospheric n • MINOS, etc. • Neutrino telescopes • Example*** of nm / ne • flavor ratio • angular dependence ***Note: this is maximal effect: horizontal = 85 - 90 deg in plots Tom Gaisser

  26. Plot shows sum of neutrinos + antineutrinos Possible E-2 diffuse astrophysical spectrum (WB bound / 2 for osc) nm ne Current AMANDA upper limit 2.6 x 10-7 GeV/cm2 sr s Solar n RPQM for prompt n Bugaev et al., PRD58 (1998) 054001 Slope = 2.7 Prompt m Slope = 3.7 Global view of atmospheric n spectrum Tom Gaisser

  27. W-B flux accounting for oscillations Diffuse signal vs charmed background in IceCube E-2 “signal” spectrum: E2dN/dE=10-7 GeV/cm2sr s IceCube Collaboration J. Ahrens et al., Astropart.Phys. 20 (2004) 507-532 Tom Gaisser

  28. Concluding comments • Discovery of neutrino oscillations depends on measured ratios; therefore robust • Super-K fits suggests relatively hard spectrum • Air-shower data also suggests hard spectrum • Z-factors “explain” differences of calculations • Uncertainty in level of charm production limits sensitivity to diffuse astrophysical neutrinos Tom Gaisser

More Related