Supernova Relic Neutrinos and the Supernova Rate Problem: Analysis of Uncertainties and Detectability of ONeMg and Failed Supernovae
Grant J. Mathews, Jun Hidaka, Toshitaka Kajino, Jyutaro Suzuki

TL;DR
This paper investigates the supernova rate problem by analyzing uncertainties in star formation data and the potential of relic neutrino detection to clarify the issue, considering faint and failed supernovae contributions.
Contribution
It provides an updated SFR compilation, assesses the impact of faint and failed supernovae on the supernova rate discrepancy, and explores how neutrino spectra can identify the problem's source.
Findings
Uncertainties in SFR data can reconcile the supernova rate with star formation.
Relic neutrino spectra can help identify the presence of faint and failed supernovae.
Neutrino observations could measure neutrino temperature and oscillations.
Abstract
Direct measurements of the core-collapse supernova rate in the redshift range 0<z 1 appear to be about a factor of two smaller than the rate inferred from the measured cosmic massive-star formation rate (SFR). We explore the possibility that one could clarify the source of this "supernova rate problem" by detecting the energy spectrum of supernova relic neutrinos with a next generation detector like Hyper-Kamiokande. We make an alternative compilation of the SFR data. We show that by only including published SFR data for which the dust obscuration has been directly determined, the ratio of the observed massive SFR to the observed supernova rate has large uncertainties, and is statistically consistent with no supernova rate problem. If we consider that a significant fraction of massive stars end their lives as faint ONeMg SNe or as failed SNe, then the ratio…
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