Neutrinos from Colliding Wind Binaries: Future Prospects for PINGU and ORCA

Massive stars play an important role in explaining the cosmic ray spectrum below the knee, possibly even up to the ankle, i.e. up to energies of 1e15 eV or 1e18.5 eV, respectively. In particular, Supernova Remnants are discussed as one of the main candidates to explain the cosmic ray spectrum. Even...

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Main Author: Tjus, J. Becker
Format: Report
Language:unknown
Published: arXiv 2014
Subjects:
Eta
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.1405.0471
https://arxiv.org/abs/1405.0471
id ftdatacite:10.48550/arxiv.1405.0471
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spelling ftdatacite:10.48550/arxiv.1405.0471 2023-05-15T17:53:42+02:00 Neutrinos from Colliding Wind Binaries: Future Prospects for PINGU and ORCA Tjus, J. Becker 2014 https://dx.doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.1405.0471 https://arxiv.org/abs/1405.0471 unknown arXiv arXiv.org perpetual, non-exclusive license http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/ High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena astro-ph.HE FOS Physical sciences Preprint Article article CreativeWork 2014 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.1405.0471 2022-04-01T13:00:11Z Massive stars play an important role in explaining the cosmic ray spectrum below the knee, possibly even up to the ankle, i.e. up to energies of 1e15 eV or 1e18.5 eV, respectively. In particular, Supernova Remnants are discussed as one of the main candidates to explain the cosmic ray spectrum. Even before their violent deaths, during the stars' regular life times, cosmic rays can be accelerated in wind environments. High-energy gamma-ray measurements indicate hadronic acceleration binary systems, leading to both periodic gamma-ray emission from binaries like LSI+60~303 and continuous emission from colliding wind environments like Eta Carinae. The detection of neutrinos and photons from hadronic interactions are one of the most promising methods to identify particle acceleration sites. In this paper, future prospects to detect neutrinos from colliding wind environments in massive stars are investigated. In particular, the seven most promising candidates for emission from colliding wind binaries are investigated to provide an estimate of the signal strength. The expected signal of a single source is about a factor of $5-10$ below the current IceCube sensitivity and it is therefore not accessible at the moment. What is discussed in addition is future the possibility to measure low-energy neutrino sources with detectors like PINGU and ORCA: the minimum of the atmospheric neutrino flux at around 25 GeV from neutrino oscillations provides an opportunity to reduce the background and increase the significance to searches for GeV/TeV neutrino sources. This paper presents the first idea, detailed studies including the detector's effective areas will be necessary in the future to test the feasibility of such an approach. : 8 pages, conference proceedings in "Wind Bubbles, Astrospheres and the Heliosphere: Environments and Cosmic Rays", Bochum, Germany. Accepted for publication in ASTRA proceedings, an Open Access Journal for Refereed Proceedings in Extraterrestrial Research Report Orca DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Eta ENVELOPE(-62.917,-62.917,-64.300,-64.300) Pingu ENVELOPE(-52.017,-52.017,67.067,67.067)
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
topic High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena astro-ph.HE
FOS Physical sciences
spellingShingle High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena astro-ph.HE
FOS Physical sciences
Tjus, J. Becker
Neutrinos from Colliding Wind Binaries: Future Prospects for PINGU and ORCA
topic_facet High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena astro-ph.HE
FOS Physical sciences
description Massive stars play an important role in explaining the cosmic ray spectrum below the knee, possibly even up to the ankle, i.e. up to energies of 1e15 eV or 1e18.5 eV, respectively. In particular, Supernova Remnants are discussed as one of the main candidates to explain the cosmic ray spectrum. Even before their violent deaths, during the stars' regular life times, cosmic rays can be accelerated in wind environments. High-energy gamma-ray measurements indicate hadronic acceleration binary systems, leading to both periodic gamma-ray emission from binaries like LSI+60~303 and continuous emission from colliding wind environments like Eta Carinae. The detection of neutrinos and photons from hadronic interactions are one of the most promising methods to identify particle acceleration sites. In this paper, future prospects to detect neutrinos from colliding wind environments in massive stars are investigated. In particular, the seven most promising candidates for emission from colliding wind binaries are investigated to provide an estimate of the signal strength. The expected signal of a single source is about a factor of $5-10$ below the current IceCube sensitivity and it is therefore not accessible at the moment. What is discussed in addition is future the possibility to measure low-energy neutrino sources with detectors like PINGU and ORCA: the minimum of the atmospheric neutrino flux at around 25 GeV from neutrino oscillations provides an opportunity to reduce the background and increase the significance to searches for GeV/TeV neutrino sources. This paper presents the first idea, detailed studies including the detector's effective areas will be necessary in the future to test the feasibility of such an approach. : 8 pages, conference proceedings in "Wind Bubbles, Astrospheres and the Heliosphere: Environments and Cosmic Rays", Bochum, Germany. Accepted for publication in ASTRA proceedings, an Open Access Journal for Refereed Proceedings in Extraterrestrial Research
format Report
author Tjus, J. Becker
author_facet Tjus, J. Becker
author_sort Tjus, J. Becker
title Neutrinos from Colliding Wind Binaries: Future Prospects for PINGU and ORCA
title_short Neutrinos from Colliding Wind Binaries: Future Prospects for PINGU and ORCA
title_full Neutrinos from Colliding Wind Binaries: Future Prospects for PINGU and ORCA
title_fullStr Neutrinos from Colliding Wind Binaries: Future Prospects for PINGU and ORCA
title_full_unstemmed Neutrinos from Colliding Wind Binaries: Future Prospects for PINGU and ORCA
title_sort neutrinos from colliding wind binaries: future prospects for pingu and orca
publisher arXiv
publishDate 2014
url https://dx.doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.1405.0471
https://arxiv.org/abs/1405.0471
long_lat ENVELOPE(-62.917,-62.917,-64.300,-64.300)
ENVELOPE(-52.017,-52.017,67.067,67.067)
geographic Eta
Pingu
geographic_facet Eta
Pingu
genre Orca
genre_facet Orca
op_rights arXiv.org perpetual, non-exclusive license
http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
op_doi https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.1405.0471
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