Quasithermal GeV neutrinos from neutron-loaded magnetized outflows in core-collapse supernovae: spectra and light curves
ORAL
Abstract
Rapidly rotating and strongly magnetized protoneutron stars (PNSs) created in core-collapse supernovae can drive relativistic magnetized winds. Ions and neutrons can be co-accelerated while they remain coupled through elastic collisions. We investigate the nucleosynthesis and subsequent nuclear disintegration, and find that relativistic neutrons can be generated in such magnetized winds. Upon eventual decoupling, resulting inelastic collisions with ejecta lead to pion production, resulting in 0.1 - 10 GeV neutrinos. Following this scenario presented in Murase, Dasgupta & Thompson, Phys. Rev. D, 89, 043012 (2014), we numerically calculate the spectra and light curves of quasithermal neutrino emission and find that power-law tails are formed without cosmic-ray acceleration. In the event of a Galactic supernova, O(10)-O(1000) neutrino events could be detected with Hyper-Kamiokande, KM3Net-ORCA and IceCube-Upgrade for PNSs with surface magnetic field B ~ 1013-15 G and initial spin period Pi ~ 1-30 ms. Successful detection will enable us to study supernovae as multienergy neutrino sources and may provide clues to the roles of PNSs in diverse classes of transients.
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Presenters
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Jose A Carpio Dumler
University of Nevada Las Vegas
Authors
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Jose A Carpio Dumler
University of Nevada Las Vegas
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Nick Ekanger
Virginia Tech
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Mukul Bhattacharya
Penn State University, Pennsylvania State University
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Shunsaku Horiuchi
Virginia Tech
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Kohta Murase
Pennsylvania State University, Penn State University