The neutrinos from a Type II supernova provide perhaps our best opportunity to probe cosmologically interesting muon and/or tauon neutrino masses. This is because matter enhanced neutrino oscillations can lead to an anomalously hot nu_e spectrum, and thus to enhanced charged current cross sections in terrestrial detectors. Two recently proposed supernova neutrino observatories, OMNIS and LAND, will detect neutrons spalled from target nuclei by neutral and charged current neutrino interactions. As this signal is not flavor specific, it is not immediately clear whether a convincing neutrino oscillation signal can be extracted from such experiments. To address this issue we examine the responses of a series of possible light and heavy mass tar...
We analyze the possibility of probing non-standard neutrino interactions (NSI, for short) through th...
We summarize our current understanding of the neutrino flavor conversions inside a core collapse sup...
© 2002 The American Astronomical SocietyRoland M. Crocker, Fulvio Melia and Raymond R. Volka
The neutrinos from a type II supernova provide perhaps our best opportunity to probe cosmologically ...
We study the effect of including flavor changing neutral currents (FCNC) in the analysis of the neut...
Neutrinos emitted during stellar core collapse leading to a supernova are primarily of the electron ...
The gravitational core collapse of a star produces a huge burst of neutrinos of all flavors. A numbe...
We point out that solar neutrino oscillations with large mixing angle as evidenced in current solar ...
We show that supernova neutrinos can be studied by observing their charged-current interactions with...
Neutrinos from core collapse supernovae can excite nuclei of some detector materials beyond their ne...
The effects of three-flavor neutrino oscillation on the supernova neutrino spectrum are studied. We ...
Neutrinos and antineutrinos of all three flavours are emitted during the post bounce phase of a core...
The νμ and ντ neutrinos (and their antiparticles) from a Galactic core-collapse supernova can be obs...
We investigate the sensitivity of some of the proposed next-generation neutrino experiments to a gal...
A long-standing problem in supernova physics is how to measure the total energy and temperature of $...
We analyze the possibility of probing non-standard neutrino interactions (NSI, for short) through th...
We summarize our current understanding of the neutrino flavor conversions inside a core collapse sup...
© 2002 The American Astronomical SocietyRoland M. Crocker, Fulvio Melia and Raymond R. Volka
The neutrinos from a type II supernova provide perhaps our best opportunity to probe cosmologically ...
We study the effect of including flavor changing neutral currents (FCNC) in the analysis of the neut...
Neutrinos emitted during stellar core collapse leading to a supernova are primarily of the electron ...
The gravitational core collapse of a star produces a huge burst of neutrinos of all flavors. A numbe...
We point out that solar neutrino oscillations with large mixing angle as evidenced in current solar ...
We show that supernova neutrinos can be studied by observing their charged-current interactions with...
Neutrinos from core collapse supernovae can excite nuclei of some detector materials beyond their ne...
The effects of three-flavor neutrino oscillation on the supernova neutrino spectrum are studied. We ...
Neutrinos and antineutrinos of all three flavours are emitted during the post bounce phase of a core...
The νμ and ντ neutrinos (and their antiparticles) from a Galactic core-collapse supernova can be obs...
We investigate the sensitivity of some of the proposed next-generation neutrino experiments to a gal...
A long-standing problem in supernova physics is how to measure the total energy and temperature of $...
We analyze the possibility of probing non-standard neutrino interactions (NSI, for short) through th...
We summarize our current understanding of the neutrino flavor conversions inside a core collapse sup...
© 2002 The American Astronomical SocietyRoland M. Crocker, Fulvio Melia and Raymond R. Volka