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The MSW Solution

A second possibility is particle physics solutions, which invoke nonstandard neutrino properties. Of these I will concentrate on what I consider the simplest and most favored explanation, the Mikheyev-Smirnov-Wolfenstein (MSW) matter enhanced conversion of one neutrino flavor into another [41]. There are other possible explanations [16], such as the more complicated 3-flavor MSW, vacuum oscillations, neutrino decay, large magnetic moments, or violation of the equivalence principle. Many of these are disfavored by the data and are, to my mind, less natural.

There are now a number of analyses of the data assuming MSW [42]-[50],[16]. One usually assumes the SSM predictions for the initial neutrino fluxes. It is important to properly incorporate their theoretical uncertainties, which can be due to the core temperature , as well as to the production and detector cross sections. One must also include the correlations of those uncertainties between different flux components and between different experiments [42], and carry out a joint analysis of the data to find the allowed regions.

The Earth effect [51], i.e., the regeneration of in the Earth at night, is significant for a small but important region of the MSW parameters, and not only affects the time-average rate but can lead to day/night asymmetries. The Kamiokande group has looked for such asymmetries and has not observed them [52], therefore excluding a particular region of the MSW parameters in a way independent of astrophysical uncertainties.

  
Figure: Allowed regions at 95% CL from individual experiments and from the global MSW fit. The Earth effect is included for both time-averaged and day/night asymmetry data, full astrophysical and nuclear physics uncertainties and their correlations are accounted for, and a joint statistical analysis is carried out. The region excluded by the Kamiokande absence of the day/night effect is also indicated. From [42,40].

The allowed regions from the overall fit for normal oscillations or are shown in Figure 2, assuming the BP SSM for the initial fluxes. There are two solutions at 95% C.L., one for small mixing angles (non-adiabatic), and one for large angles. The former gives a much better fit. There is a second large angle solution with smaller , which only occurs at 99% C.L. MSW fits can also be performed using other solar models as inputs [42,40]. The allowed regions are qualitatively similar, but differ in detail. One can even go a step further and consider nonstandard solar models and MSW simultaneously [27,42]. There is now sufficient data to determine both the MSW parameters and the core temperature in a simultaneous fit. One obtains , in remarkable agreement with the standard solar model prediction . One can similarly allow the flux to be a free parameter [27,42].

One can also consider transitions into sterile neutrinos. These are different in part because the MSW formulas contain a small contribution from the neutral current scattering from neutrons. Much more important is the lack of the neutral current scattering of the in the Kamiokande experiment. There is a non-adiabatic solution similar to the one for active neutrinos, though the fit is poorer. However, there is no acceptable large angle solution because of the lack of a neutral current, which makes that case similar to astrophysical solutions. Oscillations into a sterile neutrino in that region are also disfavored by Big Bang nucleosynthesis [16].

The next generation of solar neutrino experiments, SNO, Superkamiokande, and Borexino, should be able to cleanly establish or refute the MSW and other particle physics and astrophysical interpretations of the solar neutrino anomaly [4]. They will have at their disposal a number of observables that are relatively free of astrophysical uncertainties, including neutral to charged current ratios, spectral distortions, and day-night and seasonal time dependence. If MSW does turn out to be correct, there should be enough data to simultaneously determine the neutrino mass and mixing parameters and the initial neutrino flux components [27].



next up previous
Next: Atmospheric Neutrinos Up: Solar Neutrinos Previous: Astrophysical Solutions




Mon Nov 27 19:37:58 EST 1995