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Astrophysical Solutions

Unless the experiments are seriously in error, there must be some problem with either our understanding of the sun or of neutrinos. Clearly, the standard solar models (SSM) cannot account for the data, but there is the possibility of a highly nonstandard solar model (NSSM). For example, some of the astrophysical parameters or nuclear cross sections could differ significantly from what is usually assumed, or there could be some new physics ingredient, such as a large magnetic field in the core, that is not included in the standard calculations.

Most of the NSSM manifest themselves for the neutrinos by leading to a lower temperature for the core of the sun [33,34]. However, in all reasonable models the neutrinos should be the most temperature sensitive, leading to the lowest counting rate (relative to the SSM) for the Kamiokande experiment, contrary to observations. Similarly, a lower cross section for production would suppress the and equally. A lower cross section for production, which has been suggested by one recent experiment [35], would actually make matters worse: by accounting for the suppression of the neutrinos, there would be less room for other mechanisms to explain the larger suppression. None of these mechanisms explain the data [36].

Though most explicitly-constructed nonstandard models involve either the temperature or the cross sections [34] there is always the possibility of very nonstandard physical inputs which cannot be described in this way. It is therefore useful to carry out a model-independent analysis [26,27,37]. All that matters for the neutrinos are the magnitudes , , and of the flux components. We can analyze the data making only three minimal assumptions. One is that the solar luminosity is quasi-static and generated by the normal nuclear fusion reactions. This implies

 

where the coefficients correct for the neutrino energies. The second assumption is that astrophysical mechanisms cannot distort the shape of the spectrum significantly from what is given by normal weak interactions. (All known distortion mechanisms are negligibly small [32].) It is this assumption which differentiates astrophysical mechanisms from MSW, which can distort the shape significantly. Our third assumption is that the experiments are correct, as are the detector cross section calculations.

In this (almost) most general possible solar model all one has to play with are the four neutrino flux componentsgif subject to the luminosity constraint. The strategy is to fit the data to the and fluxes. For each set of fluxes, one varies and so as to get the best fit. The CNO and other minor fluxes play little role because they are bounded below by zero, and larger values make the fits worse. Figure 1 displays the allowed region from all data, updated from [26,27]. The best fit would occur in the unphysical region of negative fluxes. Constraining the flux to be positive, the best fit requires and of the SSM [26,27]. This, however, has a poor of 3.3 for 1 d.f., which is excluded at 93% CL.

More important, the best fit it is in a region that is hard to account for by astrophysical mechanisms. Figure 1 also displays predictions of the BP and TCL standard solar models, the 1,000 Monte Carlos SSMs of Bahcall and Ulrich (dots) [38], other explicitly constructed nonstandard models [16], and the general predictions of cool sun and low cross section models. All are far from the allowed region. Similar conclusions hold even if one ignores any one of the classes of experiment [27,28,30,39], as shown in Table 2. It is unlikely that any NSSM will explain the data.

  
Figure: 90% CL combined fit for the and fluxes. Also shown are the predictions of the BP and TCL SSM's, 1000 Monte Carlo SSM's [38], various nonstandard solar models, and the models characterized by a low core temperature or low cross section for production. Updated from [26,27,40].

  
Table: Fluxes compared to the BP standard solar model for various combinations of experiments. From [26,27,40].



next up previous
Next: The MSW Solution Up: Solar Neutrinos Previous: Solar Neutrinos




Mon Nov 27 19:37:58 EST 1995