Complete results for five years of GNO solar neutrino observations
GNO COLLABORATION: M. Altmann, M. Balata, P. Belli, E. Bellotti, R., Bernabei, E. Burkert, C. Cattadori, R. Cerulli, M. Chiarini, M. Cribier, S., d'Angelo, G. Del Re, K. H. Ebert, F. v. Feilitzsch, N. Ferrari, W. Hampel, F., X. Hartmann, E. Henrich, G. Heusser, F. Kaether

TL;DR
This paper presents the complete five-year results of the GNO solar neutrino experiment, confirming a consistent neutrino flux over time and providing updated measurements that contribute to particle and astrophysics understanding.
Contribution
It provides the final comprehensive results of the GNO solar neutrino observations, including detailed statistical and systematic error analysis, and confirms the stability of solar neutrino flux over five years.
Findings
Measured solar neutrino flux of approximately 63 SNU with combined errors.
Results are consistent with a constant neutrino flux hypothesis.
Implications discussed for particle physics and astrophysics models.
Abstract
We report the complete GNO solar neutrino results for the measuring periods GNO III, GNO II, and GNO I. The result for GNO III (last 15 solar runs) is [54.3 + 9.9 - 9.3 (stat.)+- 2.3 (syst.)] SNU (1 sigma) or [54.3 + 10.2 - 9.6 (incl. syst.)] SNU (1 sigma) with errors combined. The GNO experiment is now terminated after altogether 58 solar exposure runs that were performed between May 20, 1998 and April 9, 2003. The combined result for GNO (I+II+III) is [62.9 + 5.5 - 5.3 (stat.) +- 2.5 (syst.)] SNU (1 sigma) or [62.9 + 6.0 - 5.9] SNU (1 sigma) with errors combined in quadrature. Overall, gallium based solar observations at LNGS (first in GALLEX, later in GNO) lasted from May 14, 1991 through April 9, 2003. The joint result from 123 runs in GNO and GALLEX is [69.3 +- 5.5 (incl. syst.)] SNU (1 sigma). The distribution of the individual run results is consistent with the hypothesis of a…
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.
