ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Cosmic-ray interactions with the nuclei of the Earths atmosphere produce a flux of neutrinos in all directions with energies extending above the TeV scale. However, the Earth is not a fully transparent medium for neutrinos with energies above a few TeV. At these energies, the charged-current neutrino-nucleon cross section is large enough so that the neutrino mean-free path in a medium with the Earths density is comparable to the Earths diameter. Therefore, when neutrinos of these energies cross the Earth, there is a non-negligible probability for them to be absorbed. Since this effect depends on the distance traveled by neutrinos and on their energy, studying the zenith and energy distributions of TeV atmospheric neutrinos passing through the Earth offers an opportunity to infer the Earths density profile. Here we perform an Earth tomography with neutrinos using actual data, the publicly available one-year through-going muon sample of the atmospheric neutrino data of the IceCube neutrino telescope. We are able to determine the mass of the Earth, its moment of inertia, the mass of the Earths core and to establish the core is denser than the mantle, using weak interactions only, in a way completely independent from gravitational measurements. Our results confirm that this can be achieved with current neutrino detectors. This method to study the Earths internal structure, complementary to the traditional one from geophysics based on seismological data, is starting to provide useful information and it could become competitive as soon as more statistics is available thanks to the current and larger future neutrino detectors.
The observation of Earth matter effects in the spectrum of neutrinos coming from a next galactic core-collapse supernova (CCSN) could, in principle, reveal if neutrino mass ordering is normal or inverted. One of the possible ways to identify the mass
The programme Earth AntineutRino TomograpHy (EARTH) proposes to build ten underground facilities each hosting a telescope. Each telescope consists of many detector modules, to map the radiogenic heat sources deep in the interior of the Earth by utili
Dark matter can be captured by celestial objects and accumulate at their centers, forming a core of dark matter that can collapse to a small black hole, provided that the annihilation rate is small or zero. If the nascent black hole is big enough, it
Neutrinos interact only very weakly, so they are extremely penetrating. However, the theoretical neutrino-nucleon interaction cross section rises with energy such that, at energies above 40 TeV, neutrinos are expected to be absorbed as they pass thro
The unknown constituents of the interior of our home planet have provoked the human imagination and driven scientific exploration. We herein demonstrate that large neutrino detectors could be used in the near future to significantly improve our under