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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth Cosmic Neutrinos and High Energy Neutrino Telescopes Spåtind 2006 lecture 1 Per Olof Hulth Stockholm University Hulth@physto.se
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth Neutrino sky 5-40 MeV
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth Neutrino sky > 1 GeV Nothing seen so far…….
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth Outline Lecture 1 –Why do we expect to see cosmic neutrinos? Cosmic rays Dark matter –Neutrino detection principles Lecture 2 –Running High Energy Neutrino telescopes Some physics results –Near future telescopes
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth Why Neutrino Astronomy? Origin of High Energy cosmic rays Particle acceleration mechanisms in astrophysical sources Dark matter properties Neutrino properties The unknown, a new window to the universe!
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth + CMB -> e + + e - p+ CMB -> + ->n+ + GZK - neutrinos (Greisen, Zatsepin, Kusmin) P. Gorham Universe is not transparent for HE photons or nuclei! Protons deflected by magnetic field in space for E < 10 19 eV! Not pointing back to the source!
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth photonselectrons/positrons muonsneutrons
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth photonselectrons/positrons muonsneutrons In the same time also atmospheric neutrinos from meson and muon decays!!
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth LHC ~E -2.7 ~E -3 Ankle 1 part km -2 yr -1 knee 1 part m -2 yr -1 T. Gaisser 2005 - The accelerators? Nature accelerates particles 10 7 times the energy of LHC! What are the sources? Cosmic rays
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth The size of the Universe “LHC” accelerator? R To use LHC magnets to deliver 10 20 eV we need a radius of the accelerator to be about 1.5 times the distance Earth -Sun
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth Galactic sources Supernova are assumed to be able to accelerate particles up 10 16 eV But the observed gammas could have electromagnetic orgin and not hadronic. If gammas are from 0 decays you expect about the same flux of neutrinos! Microquasar HESS gamma flux
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth Very High Energy Gamma sources
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth Ultra High Energy Cosmic Rays UHECR are assumed to be extra galactic There are still uncertainties about flux. No obvious sources for the particles > 10 19.5 eV within 20 Mpc…? GZK effect observed? Shigeru Yoshida, ICRC 2005, Pune
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth Possible sources of UHE Cosmic Rays
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth Active galaxies Galaxy 3C296
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth Gamma Ray Bursts Cosmological sources!! But what is it?? Source 9000 Million light years away!
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth Gamma Ray Burst ?
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth We expect to have neutrinos produced when the accelerated UHECR collides with matter or light in the vicinity of the source! Detect the neutrinos!
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth Observing neutrinos Fermi acceleration of protons gives particle spectrum dN p /dE~ E -2 Neutrino production at source: p+ or p+p collisions gives pions e - + e Neutrino flavors: e : : 1:2:~0 at source 1:1:1 at detector (?)
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth NGC 2300
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth Dark matter search There exists about 5 times more dark matter in the universe than our baryonic matter “Best” dark matter candidate: neutralino Neutralinos are trapped in large objects like the Sun and Earth and self- annihilate. Search for neutrinos from the centers of Earth and Sun See talks by Thomas Burgess and Gustav Wikström today
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth Neutrino Astronomy + Neutrinos penetrate the whole Universe + Neutrinos direction points back to the source + Neutrinos are produced at the sources of the cosmic rays + Neutrinos are not reprocessed at the sources + Neutrinos expected from dark matter particle annihilation - Low expected flux of extragalactic neutrinos - Small cross section - Needs gigantic detector volumes
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth Backgrounds Atmospheric muons –Produced in cosmic ray interactions above the telescope. In AMANDA there are 10 6 downward going atmospheric muons for every upward going atmospheric neutrino induced muon -> select only upward going muons as neutrino candidates. The Earth acts as a filter. Atmospheric neutrinos
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth log [E 2 · flux(E ) / GeV cm -2 s -1 sr -1 ] -9 -7-7 -8 -6-6 -5 atmospheric 24358109 log (E /GeV) 67 AGN core (SS) AGN Jet (MPR) GRB (WB) WB bound GZK Required sensitivity many specific models for non-resolved sources... Waxman, Bahcall (1999) derive generic limits from limits on extragalactic p‘s -ray flux... for discovering extraterrestrial neutrinos TeV PeV EeV E -2 flux 50 events/year/km 2
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth MeV GeV Tev PeV EeV Different energy range for detectors Underground Optical Cherenkov deep in water and ice Radio, acoustic, air showers
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth Neutrino interactions in ice and water The muon can travel several km in e.g. ice < 1 degree eV e Hadronic shower length logE (10th of metres) CC Charge Current NC Neutral Current
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth 275 GeV muon neutrino interaction in BEBC 1 m
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth Muon range in ice Muon propagator: MMC, Chirkin, D. 27th ICRC, HE 220, Hamburg 2001 The muon starts to loose energy above 500 GeV to pair production, bremstrahlung The muon will be dressed up by many e + and e -. More Cherenkov light!
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth e low energy) “Cascades” Length of cascades 10th of meters (L prop. logE) Neutrino interactions in ice and water CC Charge Current
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth e high energy) “Cascades” Length of cascades 10th of meters (L prop. logE) Neutrino interactions in ice and water CC Charge Current
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth Neutrino cross-section For E < 10 4 GeV the x-section rises linearly with the energy For E > 10 4 GeV (due to the W-boson propagator: Cross-section measured up to 300 GeV. Up to about 10 TeV based on structure functions from HERA. Above different extrapolations.
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth Cross-section larger in e.g. -BH models Standard Model Strings (mb) Micro black holes
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth Shadowing effect of the Earth
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth PeV acceptance around horizon EeV acceptance above horizon Shadowing effect of the Earth
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth AMANDA-B10 efficiency for UHE neutrinos up E -2 neutrino flux 2.5 10 15 eV -> 5.6 10 18 eV
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth But for neutrinos the earth is transparent… The tau neutrino will degrade in energy due to interactions in the Earth but will continue through.
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth The y-distributions 0 y 1.0 NN (1-y) 2 Muon energy is harder in antineutrino interactions! hadrons muon y = (E had - M N )/E
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth y = E hadrons /E lepton = (1-y)E
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth Z-bursts From Big Bang there should be about 330 neutrinos/cm 3 with an average energy of 0.0004 eV The ultimate neutrino experiment to detect these…. CNB -> Z 0 -> decays This process has been proposed to explain the UHECR events. But you need a neutrino with 10 24 eV energy..
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth up/down energy direction time Atmospheric X Diffuse neutrinos XX Point sources; AGN, XXX WIMPS GRB XXX X Reconstruction handles X XX X XX XXXX
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth Optical Cherenkov detection
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth Detection principle O(km) long muon tracks direction determination by Cherenkov light timing 15 m O(10m) Cascades, e Neutral Current
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth neutrino muon Cherenkov light cone Detector interaction The muon radiates blue light in its wake Optical sensors capture (and map) the light
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth Neutrino interaction in AMANDA
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth Acoustic Detection
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth d R Particle cascade ionization heat pressure wave P t 50 s Attenuation length of sea water at 15-30 kHz: a few km (light: a few tens of meters) → given a large initial signal, huge detection volumes can be achieved. Threshold > 10 PeV Maximum of emission at ~ 20 kHz C. Spiering
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth Radio Detection
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth e + n p + e - e - ... cascade relativist. pancake ~ 1cm thick, ~10cm each particle emits Cherenkov radiation C signal is resultant of overlapping Cherenkov cones for >> 10 cm (radio) coherence C-signal ~ E 2 nsec negative charge is sweeped into developing shower, which acquires a negative net charge Q net ~ 0.25 E cascade (GeV). Threshold > 10 PeV C. Spiering
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth The Future We should be optimistic ! New York Times, December 29, 1932 Robert A. Millikan From S. Westerhoff, Lepton Photon 2005
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth Since we are in Norway. And that the point of gravity for High Energy Neutrino telescopes is at the South Pole which I will talk about tomorrow morning… A short historical comment.
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth Sydpolsfarare då och nu Övervintra vid kusten
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth Sydpolsfarare då och nu Tre timmars flyg från kusten
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth Sydpolen december 1911
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth Sydpolen januari 1912
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth Sydpolen november 2003
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2006-01-07Spåtind Norway P.O.Hulth Joakim Edsjö SU
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