Title: Early%20Work%20on%20Acoustic%20Detection%20of%20Neutrinos
1Early Work on Acoustic Detection of Neutrinos
- John G. Learned
- University of Hawaii
- at Stanford Workshop, 9/13/03
2First Suggestions for Detectionof High Energy
Neutrinos
- G. Askaryan, Hydrodynamical emission of tracks
of ionising particles in stable liquids Atomic
Energy 3 152 (1957). - T. Bowen, at 1975 ICRC in Munich first mention
in terms of large neutrino detector - Dolgoshein, Bowen and soon others at 1976 DUMAND
Workshop in Hawaii (including some calcs
disagreeing by 6 orders of magnitude!)
3Early Experimental Tests
- Russian work includes some reports of large
microbubble production (Volovik and Popov 1975). - Sulak and colleagues at Harvard with 185 MeV
cyclotron (1977) test many media. - Experiments at Brookhaven (1976-1978) demonstrate
thermo-acoustic mechanism. - Some hint of anomaly, though small.
4A Bibliography (not finished)
5Sound Propagation in Liquids
- simple equations for most media
6- losses roll off spectrum e-?2
- non-dispersive
damping term
7Basic Bipolar Pulse fromRapid Energy Deposition
source size
damping or smearing
8Harvard Cyclotron Experiments
- 150 MeV protons into vessel
measured only leading pulse, zero crossing at 6o
C
9more Harvard tests
- little pressure or salinity dependence
10Brookhaven Experiments
- Fast extracted 32 GeV
- proton beam
11BNL Temperature Study
12BNL Studies
Bipolar pulse inverts at 4.2o C Tripolar pulse
seems not to depend upon temperature
13LBL Heavy Ion Experiment
- Noise was a problem
- Still, no large signal (order of magnitude larger
than thermoacoustic) was seen
14Acoustic Test Conclusions
- simple theory works, mostly
Variable Variation Expected Accuracy or Variation
Distance 1/r 10
Energy Deposition E 107 in E
Frequency Content ?, ? lt ?0 not inconsistent
Temperature ß(T)/Cp 10
Various Materials ß/Cp 10
Ambient Pressure not P lt10
Small Salt Concentration slow change OK
Size of Deposition Region t d OK
Z/ß of Particle (Z/ß)2 untested
Pulse Shape Bipolar, not Tripolar Pulses mostly bipolar
15Other Mechanisms?
- Anything fast acting and relaxing will produce a
tripolar pulse - Microbubbles not normally, but what about
clathrates in deep ice? - Molecular Dissociation no, but what about in
extreme energy cascades? - Electrostriction maybe a little, but what about
from charge excess in energetic cascades?
Not much hope in water, but in deep ice? salt?
We need studies, particularly in situ. There
could be surprises!
16Expected Distance Dependence
- Power Law, Not Exponential
17LineRadiation
- sqrt(?) spectrum
- total ocean noise
- due to muons
- not important
18Pulse Due to a Cascade
19The Real Ocean
Noise Near Deep Ocean Thermal Minimum
Attenuation Length Many Km in Ocean
20-30 KHz signal
1/f wind noise
thermal noise
G. Gratta astro-ph/0104033
20Real Ocean
- Much noise due to surface waves, rain
- Significant shielding at large depths,
particularly below reciprocal depth
21Power Law Dependences
22High Threshold Huge Volume
There are limits on array gain and coherence due
to distance
per module distance limit
per module gain limit
23Something for Deep Ocean Arrays to Consider
- Threshold very high and thus rate low.
24Summary of Acoustic Neutrino Detection
- Thermoacoustic mechanism explains results, mostly
- Being revived after 25 years of little action
- Advantages
- Power law behavior in far field
- Potentially gtgt km3 effective volumes
- Well developed sonar technology
- If salt practical, could use shear waves too ?
range - Disadvantages
- Deep ocean and ice impulsive backgrounds still
not yet well known - Ice and Salt properties not yet known (soon?)
- Small Signals, Threshold gtgt PeV
- Prospects
- Modest activity underway
- Few years from dedicated experiment
25Russian Acoustic Tests in Pacific and Black Sea
Kamchatka AGAM Acoustic Array Some preliminary
results at ICRC 01
Proposed Cable Buoyed in Black Sea
Bottom Anchored 1500 hydrophones