Neutrino oscillation and expected event rate of supernova neutrinos in adiabatic explosion model
S.Kawagoe, T. Yoshida, T. Kajino, H. Suzuki, K. Sumiyoshi, S. Yamada

TL;DR
This paper investigates how shock wave effects in a supernova influence neutrino oscillations and detection signals, providing insights into neutrino properties and supernova dynamics through time-dependent event rate analysis.
Contribution
It presents detailed calculations of neutrino event rates considering shock effects in an adiabatic supernova model, linking observable signals to neutrino mixing parameters and hierarchy.
Findings
Shock effects cause <30% decrease in high-energy neutrino event rates.
Time-dependent energy ratio of neutrino events reveals shock propagation and neutrino hierarchy.
Neutrino signals can constrain mixing angle theta_{13} and mass hierarchy.
Abstract
We study how the influence of the shock wave appears in neutrino oscillations and the neutrino spectrum using density profile of adiabatic explosion model of a core-collapse supernova which is calculated in an implicit Lagrangian code for general relativistic spherical hydrodynamics. We calculate expected event rates of neutrino detection at SK and SNO for various theta_{13} values and both normal and inverted hierarchies. The predicted event rates of bar{nu}_e and nu_e depend on the mixing angle theta_{13} for the inverted and normal hierarchies, respectively, and the influence of the shock appears for about 2 - 8 s when sin^2 2 theta_{13} is larger than 10^{-3}. These neutrino signals for the shock propagation is decreased by < 30 % for bar{nu}_e in inverted (SK) or by < 15 % for nu_e in normal hierarchy (SNO) compared with the case without shock. The obtained ratio of the total event…
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