Abstract
Abstract
The origin of the observed diffuse neutrino flux is not yet known.
Studies of the relative flavour content of the neutrino flux detected at Earth
can give information on the production mechanisms at the sources and on flavour
mixing, complementary to measurements of the spectral index and normalization.
Here we demonstrate the effects of neutrino fluxes with different spectral
shapes and different initial flavour compositions dominating at different
energies, and we study the sensitivity of future measurements with the IceCube
Neutrino Observatory. Where one kind of flux gives way to another, this shows
up as a non-trivial energy dependence in the flavour compositions. We explore
this in the context of slow-jet supernovae and magnetar-driven supernovae — two
examples of astrophysical sources where charm production may be effective.
Using current best-fit neutrino mixing parameters and the projected 2040
IceCube uncertainties, we use event ratios of different event morphologies at
IceCube to illustrate the possibilities of distinguishing the energy dependence
of neutrino flavour ratios.
Cited by
2 articles.
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