Implications of ultrahigh energy neutrino flux constraints for Lorentz-invariance violating cosmogenic neutrinos

P. W. Gorham, A. Connolly, P. Allison, J. J. Beatty, K. Belov, D. Z. Besson, W. R. Binns, P. Chen, J. M. Clem, S. Hoover, M. H. Israel, J. Nam, D. Saltzberg, G. S. Varner, and A. G. Vieregg
Phys. Rev. D 86, 103006 – Published 7 November 2012

Abstract

We consider the implications of Lorentz-invariance violation (LIV) on cosmogenic neutrino observations, with particular focus on the constraints imposed on several well-developed models for ultrahigh energy cosmogenic neutrino production by recent results from the ANITA long-duration balloon payload, and RICE at the South Pole. Under a scenario proposed originally by Coleman and Glashow, each lepton family may attain maximum velocities that can exceed c, leading to energy-loss through several interaction channels during propagation. We show that future observations of cosmogenic neutrinos will provide by far the most stringent limit on LIV in the neutrino sector. We derive the implied level of LIV required to suppress observation of predicted fluxes from several mainstream cosmogenic neutrino models, and specifically those recently constrained by the ANITA and RICE experiments. We simulate via detailed Monte Carlo code the propagation of cosmogenic neutrino fluxes in the presence of LIV-induced energy losses. We show that this process produces several detectable effects in the resulting attenuated neutrino spectra, even at LIV-induced neutrino superluminality of (uνc)/c1026, about 13 orders of magnitude below current bounds.

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  • Received 4 September 2012

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.86.103006

© 2012 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

P. W. Gorham1, A. Connolly2,3, P. Allison2,3, J. J. Beatty2, K. Belov4, D. Z. Besson5, W. R. Binns6, P. Chen7,8, J. M. Clem9, S. Hoover10,11, M. H. Israel6, J. Nam7, D. Saltzberg4, G. S. Varner1, and A. G. Vieregg12

  • 1Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Hawaii, Manoa, Hawaii 96822, USA
  • 2Department of Physics, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio 43210, USA
  • 3Center for Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics, Ohio State University, Ohio 43210, USA
  • 4Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of California, Los Angeles, California 90095, USA
  • 5Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 66045, USA
  • 6Department of Physics, Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri 63130, USA
  • 7Department of Physics, Graduate Institute of Astrophysics, and Leung Center for Cosmology and Particle Astrophysics, National Taiwan University, Taipei 10617, Taiwan, Republic of China
  • 8SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, Menlo Park, California 94025, USA
  • 9Department of Physics, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware 19716, USA
  • 10Department of Physics, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60637, USA
  • 11Kavli Institute for Comological Physics, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60637, USA
  • 12Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138, USA

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Issue

Vol. 86, Iss. 10 — 15 November 2012

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