Abstract

Core Collapse Supernovae (CCSN) are explosive phenomena that may occur at the end of the life of massive stars, releasing over 99% of the energy through neutrino emission with energies on the 10 MeV scale. While the explosion mechanism is not fully understood, neutrinos are believed to play an important role. The only detection as of today are the 24 neutrinos from supernova SN1987A. The observation of the next Galactic CCSN will lead to important breakthroughs across the fields of astrophysics, nuclear and particle physics. For a Galactic CCSN, the KM3NeT ORCA and ARCA detectors in the Mediterranean Sea will observe a significant number of neutrinos via the detection of Cherenkov light, mostly induced by Inverse Beta Decay (IBD) interactions in sea water. The detection of coincident photons by the 31 photomultipliers of the KM3NeT digital optical modules (DOMs) allows to separate the signal from the optical background sources. The KM3NeT detection sensitivity to a Galactic CCSN and the potential to resolve the neutrino light-curve have been estimated exploiting detailed Monte-Carlo simulations. Specific criteria are proposed for the online triggering and the participation in the SNEWS network.

Highlights

  • The KM3NeT experiment consists of two Cherenkov detectors under construction in the Mediterranean Sea, ORCA and ARCA, composed of Digital Optical Modules (DOMs) each housing 31 3-inch photomultipliers (PMTs) [1]

  • KM3NeT detectors are mainly designed for high-energy neutrino detection, the 10 MeVscale neutrino signal from a Core Collapse Supernovae (CCSN) can be identified as a simultaneous increase of the counting rate in the photomultipliers of the detector

  • The results for ORCA, ARCA and the combination of both detectors are shown in Fig. 2 for the two stellar progenitors considered in this study

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Summary

Introduction

The KM3NeT experiment consists of two Cherenkov detectors under construction in the Mediterranean Sea, ORCA and ARCA, composed of Digital Optical Modules (DOMs) each housing 31 3-inch photomultipliers (PMTs) [1]. ORCA, off the French coast, will consist of one block with 9 m vertical separation between DOMs and ARCA of two blocks with 36 m vertical spacing between DOMs, offshore Sicily. Together, they constitute an instrumented volume at the km scale [2]. KM3NeT detectors are mainly designed for high-energy neutrino detection, the 10 MeVscale neutrino signal from a CCSN can be identified as a simultaneous increase of the counting rate in the photomultipliers of the detector. The outgoing electron/positron produced in these interactions induces Cherenkov light that can be detected by the PMTs

Flux models and simulations
Significance results
Trigger performance
Findings
Conclusions
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