Department of Physics & Astronomy
University of New Mexico

Nuclear, Particle, Astroparticle and Cosmology (NUPAC) Seminars

The Neutrino Halo

Presented by John Cherry (UC San Diego)

We show that the small fraction of neutrinos that undergo direction-changing scattering outside of the neutrinosphere could have significant influence on neutrino flavor transformation in core-collapse supernova environments. The flux of thesescattered neutrinos is strongly dependent on the nuclear composition of the supernova envelope, and as a result the neutrino flavor evolution history may also be dependent on nuclear composition. We demonstrate that the standard treatment for collective neutrino flavor transformation is adequate at late times, but could be inadequate in early epochs of core-collapse supernovae, where the potentials that govern neutrino flavor evolution are affected by the scattered neutrinos. Taking account of this effect, and the way it couples to entropy and composition, will require a new approach in neutrino flavor transformation modeling.

2:00 pm, Tuesday, August 28, 2012
PAIS-2540, PAIS

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A schedule of talks within the Department of Physics and Astronomy is available on the P&A web site at http://physics.unm.edu/pandaweb/events/index.php