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Published November 15, 2019 | Submitted + Published
Journal Article Open

Triangulation pointing to core-collapse supernovae with next-generation neutrino detectors

Abstract

A core-collapse supernova releases the vast majority of the gravitational binding energy of its compact remnant in the form of neutrinos over an interval of a few tens of seconds. In the event of a core-collapse supernova within our Galaxy, multiple current and future neutrino detectors would see a large burst in activity. Neutrinos escape a supernova hours before light does, so any prompt information about the supernova's direction that can be inferred via the neutrino signal will help to enable early electromagnetic observations of the supernova. While there are methods to determine the direction via intrinsic directionality of some neutrino-matter interaction channels, a complementary method which will reach maturity with the next generation of large neutrino detectors is the use of relative neutrino arrival times at different detectors around the globe. To evaluate this triangulation method for realistic detector configurations of the next few decades, we generate random supernova neutrino signals with realistic detector assumptions and quantify the error in expected time delay between detections. We investigate a practical and robust method of estimating the time differences between burst detections, also correcting for detection efficiency bias. With this method, we determine the pointing precision of supernova neutrino triangulation as a function of supernova distance and location, detectors used, detector background level, and neutrino mass ordering assumption. Under favorable conditions, the 1σ supernova search area from triangulation could be reduced to a few percent of the sky. It should be possible to implement this method with low latency under realistic conditions.

Additional Information

© 2019 American Physical Society. Received 18 September 2019; published 11 November 2019. N. B. L. was supported for summer work at Duke University by the Caltech Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowships program and the National Science Foundation Grant No. PHY-1506069. The research activities of K. S. are supported by the Department of Energy and the National Science Foundation. We are grateful to R. Patterson and to Duke Neutrino and Cosmology Group members, especially D. Pershey, E. Conley, and A. J. Roeth.

Attached Files

Published - PhysRevD.100.103005.pdf

Submitted - 1909.03151.pdf

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August 19, 2023
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