Supernova Emission of Secretly Interacting Neutrino Fluid: Theoretical Foundations
Damiano F. G. Fiorillo, Georg Raffelt, Edoardo Vitagliano

TL;DR
This paper develops a theoretical framework for understanding how secret neutrino interactions in supernovae could alter neutrino transport, emission, and flux spectra, providing boundary conditions and dynamical solutions for self-interacting neutrino fluids.
Contribution
It introduces a first-principles analysis of neutrino self-interactions in supernovae, including modified transport, boundary conditions, and dynamical expansion models.
Findings
Neutrino transport differs by a spectral average of interaction rate.
Energy flux from a hot to cold surface is reduced by 3-4%.
Neutrino front expands at luminal speed with outflow velocity approaching sound speed.
Abstract
Neutrino-neutrino scattering could have a large secret component that would turn neutrinos within a supernova (SN) core into a self-coupled fluid. Neutrino transport within the SN core, emission from its surface, expansion into space, and the flux spectrum and time structure at Earth might all be affected. We examine these questions from first principles. First, diffusive transport differs only by a modified spectral average of the interaction rate. We next study the fluid energy transfer between a hot and a cold blackbody surface in plane-parallel and spherical geometry. The key element is the decoupling process within the radiating bodies, which themselves are taken to be isothermal. For a zero-temperature cold plate, mimicking radiation into free space by the hot plate, the energy flux is 3--4\% smaller than the usual Stefan-Boltzmann Law. The fluid energy density just outside the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Neutrino Physics Research · Dark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena
