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High-energy neutrinos from choked-jet supernovae: searches, implications, and multimessenger sutdies

ORAL

Abstract

The origin of the high-energy astrophysical neutrinos discovered by IceCube remains largely unknown. Multi-messenger studies have indicated that the majority of these neutrinos come from gamma-ray-dark sources. Choked-jet supernovae (cjSNe), which are supernovae powered by relativistic jets stalled in stellar materials, may lead to neutrino emission via photohadronic interactions while the coproduced gamma rays are absorbed. In this talk, I present an analysis to search for correlations between IceCube's 10-year muon-track events and our SN Ib/c sample, collected from publicly available catalogs. In addition to the conventional power-law models, we also consider the impacts of more realistic neutrino emission models for the first time, and study the effects of the jet beaming factor in the analyses. Our results show no significant correlation. Even so, the conservative upper limits we set to the contribution of cjSNe to the diffuse astrophysical neutrino flux still allow SNe Ib/c to be the dominant source of astrophysical neutrinos observed by IceCube. I will discuss the implications to the cjSNe scenario from our results and the power of future neutrino and supernova observations. I will also present our subsequent multimessenger studies on the choked-jet supernovae. (arXiv:2210.03088 and more)

Publication: https://arxiv.org/abs/2210.03088

Presenters

  • Bei Zhou

    Theory division, Fermilab

Authors

  • Bei Zhou

    Theory division, Fermilab

  • Po-Wen Chang

    The Ohio State University

  • Kohta Murase

    Pennsylvania State University, Penn State University

  • Marc P Kamionkowski

    Johns Hopkins University