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Atmospheric Neutrinos

Atmospheric neutrinos, which are the decay products of hadrons produced by cosmic ray interactions in the atmosphere, have been detected in a number of underground experiments. Although the predictions for individual flux components, i.e., and , are uncertain by at least 20% [53], the ratio is much cleaner, with various calculations agreeing at the 5% level.

The Kamiokande and IMB experiments [54] have both observed a statistically significant deviation of r from the expected value, as indicated in Table 3. The value quoted is determined from the ratio of muons to electrons produced within the detector, compared to the theoretical expectation. The Soudan II data is consistent, though with larger statistical errors. Earlier results from Frejus and NUSEX do not show signs of a deviation, but again have large statistical uncertainties.

  
Table: Ratios observed by recent experiments. The first (second) uncertainty is statistical (systematic).

The small value of r observed by Kamiokande and IMB suggests the possibility of the disappearance of or the appearance of extra . In particular, the results could be accounted for by or oscillationsgif with eV and near maximal mixing (). The oscillation interpretation has recently been supported by the observation by Kamiokande of an anomaly in r for multi-GeV events [55], which is consistent with their earlier sub-GeV sample (and which, incidentally, excludes the interesting possibility of a positron excess due to proton decay [56], .). Also, the multi-GeV data exhibit a zenith angle distribution which is suggestive of oscillations, though the statistics are not compelling. However, there are caveats. In particular, (a) the anomaly has not been observed by all groups. (b) There are possible uncertainties due to the interaction cross sections in the detector and particle identification. However, at the energies involved it is unlikely that there would be significant differences between the and cross sections, and the preliminary results from a KEK beam test do not show any signs of particle mis-identification for Kamiokande. (c) The IMB collaboration has also analyzed the ratio of throughgoing to stopping muons. No anomaly is observed, excluding the lower part of the range, e.g., eV, suggested by r. (d) IMB has also measured the absolute flux of upward muons. No anomaly was observed, nominally excluding the interesting parameter range. However, this conclusion relies on the theoretical calculation of the absolute flux, and also involves uncertainties from the deep inelastic scattering cross section [53].

One can regard the atmospheric neutrino anomaly as a strong suggestion for neutrino oscillations. However, confirmation will probably require long baseline oscillation experiments, which are sensitive to small and large mixings. Experiments sensitive to oscillations are proposed or suggested for Brookhaven, Fermilab, CERN, and KEK. There are also several proposals for long baseline experiments at reactors, which, however, are only sensitive to disappearance.



next up previous
Next: Cosmological Neutrinos Up: Implications of Neutrino Mass Previous: The MSW Solution




Mon Nov 27 19:37:58 EST 1995