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Among all neutrino mixing parameters, the atmospheric neutrino mixing angle theta_{23} introduces the strongest variation on the flux ratios of ultra high energy neutrinos. We investigate the potential of these flux ratio measurements at neutrino telescopes to constrain theta_{23}. We consider astrophysical neutrinos originating from pion, muon-damped and neutron sources and make a comparative study of their sensitivity reach to theta_{23}. It is found that neutron sources are most favorable for testing deviations from maximal theta_{23}. Using a chi^2 analysis, we show in particular the power of combining (i) different flux ratios from the same type of source, and also (ii) combining flux ratios from different astrophysical sources. We include in our analysis ``impure sources, i.e., deviations from the usually assumed initial (1 : 2 : 0), (0 : 1 : 0) or (1 : 0 : 0) flux compositions.
In study of muon neutrino disappearance at 810 km, the NOvA experiment finds flavor mixing of the atmospheric sector to deviate from maximal ($sin^2theta_{23} = 0.5$) by 2.6 $sigma$. The result is in tension with the 295-km baseline measurements of T
Present global fits of world neutrino data hint towards non-maximal $theta_{23}$ with two nearly degenerate solutions, one in the lower octant ($theta_{23} <pi/4$), and the other in the higher octant ($theta_{23} >pi/4$). This octant ambiguity of $th
We study the possibility of determining the octant of the neutrino mixing angle $theta_{23}$, that is, whether $theta_{23}> 45^circ$ or $theta_{23}<45^circ$, in long baseline neutrino experiments. Here we numerically derived the sensitivity limits wi
We investigate the prospects for determining the octant of $theta_{23}$ in the future long baseline oscillation experiments. We present our results as contour plots on the ($theta_{23}-45^circ$, $delta$)--plane, where $delta$ is the CP phase, showing
This Letter reports new results on muon neutrino disappearance from NOvA, using a 14 kton detector equivalent exposure of $6.05times10^{20}$ protons-on-target from the NuMI beam at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory. The measurement probes the