It is shown how high energy neutrino beams from very distant sources can be utilized to learn about some properties of neutrinos such as lifetimes, mass hierarchy, etc. Furthermore, even mixing elements such as U e3 and the CPV phase in the neutrino mixing matrix can be measured in principle. Pseudo
High-energy neutrinos from extragalactic jets
โ Scribed by Karl Mannheim
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1995
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 778 KB
- Volume
- 3
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0927-6505
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โฆ Synopsis
In this paper I calculate the diffuse background of high-energy neutrinos from extragalactic jets emerging from active galactic nuclei ( AGN) _ I assume that radio-quiet AGN have jets that are disrupted by turbulence in the vicinity of an accretion disk surrounding a central black hole and remain invisible in the radio band. In contrast, radio-loud AGN have high Mach number jets which dissipate in a strong shock far away from the AGN. It is assumed that protons are accelerated to ultra-high energies in jets. Photo-production of pions induces neutrino emission and electromagnetic cascades. The cascade spectra are in agreement with the most recent X-and y-ray observations of AGN; in particular with the lack of y-ray emission from radio-quiet AGN and the powerful y-ray emission from flat-spectrum radio-loud AGN. A high energy neutrino background from radio-quiets is predicted assuming that they produce the cosmic diffuse X-ray background. However, the flux limits from the Frejus proton decay experiment are violated by this prediction. On the other hand, recent y-ray observations make it very plausible that the diffuse y-ray background at least above 100 MeV is due to radio-loud AGN. A striking similarity exists between the energy fluxes of diffuse y-rays above 100 MeV and cosmic ray protons above the ankle. This is an independent argument for proton acceleration in radio jets consistent with the explanation of the individual y-ray spectra by hadronically induced cascades. The corresponding prediction of a neutrino flux at ultra-high energies therefore rests on a firm basis.
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