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A future large-volume liquid scintillator detector such as the proposed 50 kton LENA (Low Energy Neutrino Astronomy) detector would provide a high-statistics measurement of terrestrial antineutrinos originating from $beta$-decays of the uranium and thorium chains. Additionally, the neutron is scattered in the forward direction in the detection reaction $bar u_e+pto n+e^+$. Henceforth, we investigate to what extent LENA can distinguish between certain geophysical models on the basis of the angular dependence of the geoneutrino flux. Our analysis is based on a Monte-Carlo simulation with different levels of light yield, considering an unloaded PXE scintillator. We find that LENA is able to detect deviations from isotropy of the geoneutrino flux with high significance. However, if only the directional information is used, the time required to distinguish between different geophysical models is of the order of severals decades. Nonetheless, a high-statistics measurement of the total geoneutrino flux and its spectrum still provides an extremely useful glance at the Earths interior.
A future large-volume liquid scintillator detector would provide a high-statistics measurement of terrestrial antineutrinos originating from $beta$-decays of the uranium and thorium chains. In addition, the forward displacement of the neutron in the
Decays of radionuclides throughout the Earths interior produce geothermal heat, but also are a source of antineutrinos. The (angle-integrated) geoneutrino flux places an integral constraint on the terrestrial radionuclide distribution. In this paper,
The large-volume liquid-scintillator detector LENA (Low Energy Neutrino Astronomy) has been proposed as a next-generation experiment for low-energy neutrinos. High-precision spectroscopy of solar, Supernova and geo-neutrinos provides a new access to
The deepest hole that has ever been dug is about 12 km deep. Geochemists analyze samples from the Earths crust and from the top of the mantle. Seismology can reconstruct the density profile throughout all Earth, but not its composition. In this respe
Superionic hydrogen was previously thought to be an exotic state predicted and confirmed only in pure H2O ice. In Earths deep interior, H2O exists in the form of O-H groups in ultra-dense hydrous minerals, which have been proved to be stable even at