1,100 research outputs found
No-go for exactly degenerate neutrinos at high scale?
We show in a model independent manner that, if the magnitudes of Majorana
masses of neutrinos are exactly equal at some high scale, the radiative
corrections cannot reproduce the observed masses and mixing spectrum at the low
scale, irrespective of the Majorana phases or the mixing angles at the high
scale.Comment: 12 pages ReVTeX, A few typos corrected in the 2nd versio
Earth matter effects on the supernova neutrino spectra
We explore the earth matter effects on the energy spectra of neutrinos from a
supernova. We show that the observations of the energy spectra of and
from a galactic supernova may enable us to identify the solar
neutrino solution, to determine the sign of , and to probe the
mixing matrix element to values as low as . We point out
scenarios in which the matter effects can even be established through the
observation of the spectrum at a single detector.Comment: 8 pages LaTeX, 2 eps figures, uses Rinton-P9x6.cls. Talk given at
CICHEP '2001, Cairo, Egypt, January 200
Combining LSND and Atmospheric Anomalies in a Three-Neutrino Picture
We investigate the three-neutrino mixing scheme for solving the atmospheric
and LSND anomalies. We find the region in the parameter space that provides a
good fit to the LSND and the SK atmospheric data, taking into account the CHOOZ
constraint. We demonstrate that the goodness of this fit is comparable to that
of the conventional fit to the solar and atmospheric data. Large values of the
LSND angle are favoured and can be as high as 0.1.
This can have important effects on the atmospheric electron neutrino ratios as
well as on down-going multi-GeV muon neutrino ratios. We examine the
possibility of distinguishing this scheme from the conventional one at the long
baseline experiments. We find that the number of electron neutrino events
observed at the CERN to Gran Sasso experiment may lead us to identify the
scheme, and hence the mass pattern of neutrinos
Signatures of supernova neutrino oscillations in the Earth mantle and core
The Earth matter effects on supernova (SN) neutrinos can be identified at a
single detector through peaks in the Fourier transform of their ``inverse
energy'' spectrum. The positions of these peaks are independent of the SN
models and therefore the peaks can be used as a robust signature of the Earth
matter effects, which in turn can distinguish between different neutrino mixing
scenarios. Whereas only one genuine peak is observable when the neutrinos
traverse only the Earth mantle, traversing also the core gives rise to multiple
peaks. We calculate the strengths and positions of these peaks analytically and
explore their features at a large scintillation detector as well as at a
megaton water Cherenkov detector through Monte Carlo simulations. We propose a
simple algorithm to identify the peaks in the actual data and quantify the
chances of a peak identification as a function of the location of the SN in the
sky.Comment: 17 pages, 9 figure
Resolving ambiguities in the neutrino mass-flavour spectrum from supernova neutrinos
We analyze the neutrino conversions inside a supernova in the 3 mixing
scheme, and their effects on the neutrino spectra observed at the earth. We
find that the observations of the energy spectra of neutrinos from a future
galactic supernova may enable us to identify the solar neutrino solution, to
determine the sign of , and to probe the mixing matrix element
|U_{e3}|^2 to values as low as 10^{-4}-10^{-3}.Comment: 3 pages, 1 eps figure. Talk given at TAUP-99. To be published in
Nucl. Phys. B, Proc. Supp
Identifying Earth matter effects on supernova neutrinos at a single detector
The neutrino oscillations in Earth matter introduce modulations in the
supernova neutrino spectra. These modulations can be exploited to identify the
presence of Earth effects on the spectra, which would enable us to put a limit
on the value of the neutrino mixing angle and to identify whether
the mass hierarchy is normal or inverted. We demonstrate how the Earth effects
can be identified at a single detector without prior assumptions about the
flavor-dependent source spectra, using the Fourier transform of the
``inverse-energy'' spectrum of the signal. We explore the factors affecting the
efficiency of this method, and find that the energy resolution of the detector
is the most crucial one. In particular, whereas water Cherenkov detectors may
need a few ten thousand events to identify the Earth effects, a few thousand
may be enough at scintillation detectors, which generically have a much better
energy resolution. A successful identification of the Earth effects through
this method can also provide to a good accuracy. The
relative strength of the detected Earth effects as a function of time provides
a test for supernova models.Comment: 18 pages, 10 figures, JCAP format. Final version to be published in
JCAP. References and some minor clarifications added to the original versio
How large can the branching ratio of be ?
Motivated by the large like-sign dimuon charge asymmetry observed recently,
whose explanation would require an enhanced decay rate of , we explore how large a branching ratio of this decay mode is allowed
by the present constraints. We use bounds from the lifetimes of and
, constraints from the branching ratios of related
modes, as well as measurements of the mass difference, width difference and
CP-violating phase in the - system. Using an effective field
theory approach, we show that a branching ratio as high as 15% may be allowed
while being consistent with the above constraints. The model with a scalar
leptoquark cannot increase the branching ratio to a per cent level. However, an
enhancement up to 5% is possible in the model with an extremely light with
flavor-dependent interactions, even after all the couplings are taken to be
perturbative. This however cannot account for the dimuon anomaly completely by
itself.Comment: Typos corrected, some discussions added, accepted for publication in
Phys.Rev.
Radiative magnification of neutrino mixings and a natural explanation of the neutrino anomalies
We show that the neutrino mixing pattern with the large mixing required for
the atmospheric neutrino problem and the small mixing angle MSW solution for
the solar neutrino problem can be naturally generated through radiative
magnification, even though all the mixing angles at the seesaw scale may be
small. This can account for the neutrino anomalies as well as the CHOOZ
constraints in the context of quark-lepton unified theories, where the quark
and lepton mixing angles are expected to be similar in magnitude at the high
scale. We also indicate the 4 mixing scenarios for which this mechanism of
radiative magnification can provide a natural explanation.Comment: 14 pages RevTex, 2 eps figure
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