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1.
Phys Rev Lett ; 132(2): 021002, 2024 Jan 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38277605

RESUMO

When hypothetical neutrino secret interactions (νSI) are large, they form a fluid in a supernova (SN) core, flow out with sonic speed, and stream away as a fireball. For the first time, we tackle the complete dynamical problem and solve all steps, systematically using relativistic hydrodynamics. The impact on SN physics and the neutrino signal is remarkably small. For complete thermalization within the fireball, the observable spectrum changes in a way that is independent of the coupling strength. One potentially large effect beyond our study is quick deleptonization if νSI violate lepton number. By present evidence, however, SN physics leaves open a large region in parameter space, where laboratory searches and future high-energy neutrino telescopes will probe νSI.

2.
Phys Rev Lett ; 131(11): 111003, 2023 Sep 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37774278

RESUMO

Starburst galaxies are well-motivated astrophysical emitters of high-energy gamma rays. They are well-known cosmic-ray "reservoirs," thanks to their expected large magnetic field turbulence which confine high-energy protons for ∼10^{5} years. Over such long times, cosmic-ray transport can be significantly affected by scatterings with sub-GeV dark matter. Here we point out that this scattering distorts the cosmic-ray spectrum, and the distortion can be indirectly observed by measuring the gamma rays produced by cosmic rays via hadronic collisions. Present gamma-ray data show no sign of such a distortion, leading to stringent bounds on the cross section between protons and dark matter. These are highly complementary with current bounds and have large room for improvement with the future gamma-ray measurements in the 0.1-10 TeV range from the Cherenkov Telescope Array, which can strengthen the limits by as much as 2 orders of magnitude.

3.
Phys Rev Lett ; 131(2): 021001, 2023 Jul 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37505964

RESUMO

Majoron-like bosons would emerge from a supernova (SN) core by neutrino coalescence of the form νν→ϕ and ν[over ¯]ν[over ¯]→ϕ with 100-MeV-range energies. Subsequent decays to (anti)neutrinos of all flavors provide a flux component with energies much larger than the usual flux from the "neutrino sphere." The absence of 100-MeV-range events in the Kamiokande-II and Irvine-Michigan-Brookhaven signal of SN 1987A implies that less than 1% of the total energy was thus emitted and provides the strongest constraint on the Majoron-neutrino coupling of g≲10^{-9} MeV/m_{ϕ} for 100 eV≲m_{ϕ}≲100 MeV. It is straightforward to extend our new argument to other hypothetical feebly interacting particles.

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