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Science from detection of neutrinos from supernovae

R N Boyd et al 2003 J. Phys. G: Nucl. Part. Phys. 29 2543-2567   doi: 10.1088/0954-3899/29/11/009  Help

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R N Boyd1, G C McLaughlin2, A St J Murphy3 and P F Smith4,5
1 Department of Physics, Department of Astronomy, Ohio State University, Columbus, OH 43210, USA
2 Department of Physics and Astronomy, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC 27695, USA
3 School of Physics, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, EH9 3JZ, UK
4 Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, Chilton, Oxfordshire, OX11 OQX, UK
5 Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of California at Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA

Abstract. The neutrinos emitted from supernovae contain information about the physics of stellar collapse and of the nature of the neutrinos themselves. Several large detectors exist that will be capable of observing some subset of those neutrinos. In addition, we have designed OMNIS, the Observatory for Multiflavour NeutrInos from Supernovae. OMNIS will detect the neutrinos from (a) neutral-current interactions from νe, νμ, \bar{\nu}_{\mu} , ντ and \bar{\nu}_{\tau} , and (b) charged-current interactions from high-momentum νe, with lead nuclei. It will utilize two types of detectors: (1) lead slabs alternating with vertical planes of neutron detectors, in which neutrons produced by neutrino–lead interactions will be detected, and (2) lead perchlorate, in which both the resulting neutrons and Cerenkov light will be detected. OMNIS will measure neutrino masses below 100 eV, provide new information on MSW or vacuum oscillations from νμτ to νe, especially to Θ13, and possibly diagnose the process of collapse to a black hole. It will observe the late-time evolution of the neutrino distributions, and possibly see predicted late-time effects, e.g. a phase transition from neutron-star matter to kaon-condensed matter or quark matter. OMNIS is also sensitive to some modes of nucleon decay that should make it possible to improve significantly on present limits for those modes. Of crucial importance to OMNIS is an experiment, using neutrinos from a stopped pion beam, to determine the flavour and energy-dependent response of lead to neutrinos. This will provide important input into cross section calculations for which few data currently exist. We plan to perform this experiment using one of the lead perchlorate detector modules from OMNIS.

Print publication: Issue 11 (November 2003)
Received 26 August 2003
Published 14 October 2003

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