Neutrino spectra evolution during proto-neutron star deleptonization
T. Fischer, G. Mart\'inez-Pinedo, M. Hempel, M. Liebend\"orfer

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the evolution of neutrino spectra during proto-neutron star deleptonization, showing that neutral-current processes dominate over charge-current reactions, leading to similar spectra across neutrino flavors and proton-rich ejecta.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of weak processes affecting neutrino spectra during proto-neutron star deleptonization, highlighting the suppression of charge-current reactions over time.
Findings
Neutrino spectra become similar across flavors during deleptonization.
Charge-current reactions are suppressed due to Pauli-blocking effects.
Ejecta remain proton-rich, ruling out heavy r-process element synthesis.
Abstract
The neutrino-driven wind, which occurs after the onset of a core-collapse supernova explosion, has long been considered as the possible site for the synthesis of heavy r-process elements in the Universe. Only recently, it has been possible to simulate supernova explosions up to ~10 seconds, based on three-flavor Boltzmann neutrino transport. These simulations show that the neutrino luminosities and spectra of all flavors are very similar and their difference even decreases during the deleptonization of the proto-neutron star. As a consequence, the ejecta are always proton rich which rules out the possible production of heavy r-process elements (Z>56). We perform a detailed analysis of the different weak processes that determine the neutrino spectra. Non-electron flavor (anti)neutrinos are produced and interact only via neutral-current processes, while electron (anti)neutrinos have…
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