Abstract

Self-induced flavor conversions near the supernova (SN) core can make the fluxes for different neutrino species become almost equal, potentially altering the dynamics of the SN explosion and washing out all further neutrino oscillation effects. We present a new model-independent analysis strategy for the next galactic SN signal that will distinguish this flavor equalization scenario from a matter effects only scenario during the SN accretion phase. Our method does not rely on fitting or modelling the energy-dependent fluences of the different species to a known function, but rather uses a model-independent comparison of charged-current and neutral-current events at large next-generation underground detectors. Specifically, we advocate that the events due to elastic scattering on protons in a scintillator detector, which is insensitive to oscillation effects and can be used as a model-independent normalization, should be compared with the events due to inverse beta decay of $\bar\nu_e$ in a water Cherenkov detector and/or the events due to charged-current interactions of $\nu_e$ in an Argon detector. The ratio of events in these different detection channels allow one to distinguish a complete flavor equalization from a pure matter effect, for either of the neutrino mass orderings, as long as the spectral differences among the different species are not too small.

Highlights

  • The detection of the galactic supernova (SN) neutrino burst stands out as one of the frontiers of low-energy neutrino astronomy

  • We advocate that the events due to elastic scattering on protons in a scintillator detector, which is insensitive to oscillation effects and can be used as a model-independent normalization, should be compared with the events due to inverse beta decay of νe in a water Cherenkov detector and/or the events due to chargedcurrent interactions of νe in an argon detector

  • We show that the ratio of events in these different detection channels can distinguish between complete flavor equalization and a pure matter effect driven flavor conversion, as long as spectral differences among the different species are not too small

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The detection of the galactic supernova (SN) neutrino burst stands out as one of the frontiers of low-energy neutrino astronomy. Fast flavor conversions just above the SN core may not be inhibited by a large matter density [15,18,23] All these effects go in the same direction: an equalization of neutrino fluxes of different neutrino species as the outcome of self-induced flavor conversions. If this occurs in the deepest stellar regions, all further matter effects occurring at larger distances get washed out. The goal of our work is to propose a model-independent test to distinguish between the pure matter effect scenario versus a complete flavor equalization during the accretion phase We do this in a way that is agnostic to the fitting formulas for the neutrino spectra.

SUPERNOVA NEUTRINO FLUENCES
OSCILLATION SCENARIOS
NEUTRINO DETECTION
Scintillation detector
Water Cherenkov detectors
Liquid argon time projection chambers
Proton elastic scattering
Inverse beta decay
Argon charged-current reaction
IDENTIFYING THE FLAVOR CONVERSION SCENARIO
Normal ordering
Inverted ordering
SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS
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