Abstract

Whereas \(\gamma \)-rays can be produced both by electromagnetic processes such as inverse Compton scattering of high energy electrons and by hadronic processes such as the production of neutral pions and their subsequent decays into \(\gamma \)-rays, high energy extraterrestrial neutrinos are unique messengers of hadronic acceleration processes because they can only be produced by the decay of charged pions or heavier mesons which can not be produced electromagnetically. For this reason, the observation of high energy extraterrestrial neutrinos plays a decisive role in the identification of the sources of charged hadronic cosmic rays. In the present chapter we describe both the detection methods for such neutrinos as well as scenarios for their production. We start by reviewing the neutrino interaction processes most relevant for neutrino detection, followed by a summary of the detection techniques and experiments. The second part discusses the production of neutrinos by interactions of the primary cosmic rays both within the sources and during propagation from the source to the observer, along with the resulting neutrino fluxes. Figure 9.1 summarizes the diffuse “grand unified” neutrino spectrum extending from the lowest energies dominated by the cosmological relic blackbody neutrino spectrum of temperature \(\simeq \) \(1.9\,\)K to the highest energy neutrinos that are produced by interactions of primary cosmic rays either during propagation or within the sources. In the following we will restrict ourselves to the high energy range at a TeV and above. Relic neutrinos are discussed in the context of cosmology in Chap. 4 and as contributions to dark matter in Chap. 12 which also covers solar and terrestrial neutrinos.

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