Sunday, November 29, 2020

The curious case of the softening spectrum: more on astrophysical neutrinos

IceCube has posted a set of papers on the arXiv, giving new results on starting events: neutrino interactions that occur within IceCube.   These analyses use 102 events observed in 7 1/2 years of data,.  There are many new results, including new measurements of the astrophysical neutrino flux and energy spectrum, evidence for the observation of tau neutrinos and  the  first measurement of the neutrino-nucleon cross-section using starting events.  The papers are available on the arXiv preprint server, and have been submitted for journal publication:

"The IceCube high-energy starting event sample: Description and flux characterization with 7.5 years of data," R. Abbasi et al., available as arXiv:2011.03545.

"Measurement of Astrophysical tau neutrinos in IceCube's high-energy starting events, R. Abbasi et al., available as arXiv:2011.03561.

"Measurement of the high-energy all-flavor neutrino-nucleon cross section with IceCube, R. Abbasi et al., available as arXiv:2011.03560

There were a couple of reasons to have three publications.  These are three very different topics, based on rather different analysis techniques.  But, length was also an issue: the first paper comes in at 51 pages, definitely on the long end of the spectrum for physics papers.   This post will focus on the first paper, which also describes the data sample.

The analyses in the first paper are very similar to those in previously published starting event analyses, which I discussed here.   The current analyses benefits from more data, and better detector calibrations and better analysis software, giving better measurements of the energy deposited in the detector, better measurements of the neutrino directions, etc.

That said, the results have changed more than we would have expected.  Most notably, the measured neutrino energy spectrum has gotten softer (i. e. there are fewer very energy astrophysical neutrinos, and more with lower energy).  The figure immediately above shows the energy spectrum (expressed as energy deposited in the detector) and the zenith angle (where cos(theta)=+1 is going vertically downward, and cos(theta)=-1 is going vertically upward), compared to the expectations for atmosphe ric muons, atmospheric neutrinos (labelled as Atmo Conv.) and a fit to the astrophysical spectrum.  The fit found the astrophysical spectrum was consistent with a flux phi=phi_0 (E_neutrino/100 TeV)^-alpha, where alpha=2.87+/-0.20.  Here, phi_0 is a normalization constant.  In comparison, previous contained event analyses found alpha in the 2.3 to 2.6 range, depending on which years of data were studied.    The collaboration spent much time trying to determine what has changed.  Otherwise, this paper would have been out some time ago.  

We looked at every plausible explanation that we could find, and even some that were clearly less plausible.  If we use just the first 4 years of data, the results were similar to those in the previous analysis.  If we swap the old and new software and calibration, very little changes.  There is no evidence for any change in the detector behavior; one expects detectors buried under a mile of ice and held under constant conditions to be very stable, and, as expected, we see no significant changes in atmospheric neutrinos, cosmic-ray muons, or any other measure of detector performance.   The interactions were spread pretty evenly throughout the detector, so it is not a problem in a small part of the detector.   The astrophysical neutrinos come from a large number (very likely >50) source from many directions in the sky, so it is not plausible that this is due to a change in their source.   So, in the end, I am just chalking this up to statistics - once in a while, we expect large (roughly 2 sigma) statistical fluctuations, and this seems to be one of those occasions.

 The neutrino arrival directions have also changed somewhat.  This is better understood, and comes from a combination of improved analysis techniques and a better understanding of how light scatters and is absorbed in the Antarctic ice.  For each neutrino candidate, we estimate the probability of it coming from any given direction in the sky.  The result is a blob (which may be regular or irregular, depending on the reconstruction) centered around the most likely arrival direction.  The graphic at the top shows our revised sky map, which shows the estimated flux coming from different directions, where we add up the probability that each neutrino came from a given direction.   The gray dot shows the center of our galaxy, and the gray curve shows the galactic plane.

The color code gives the "Test statistic," a measure of how likely the measured flux from that direction can be explained by background.   There is a hot spot (every map must have a hottest spot), but it is not statistically significant; this map shows no evidence for any specific neutrino sources.  It should be noted that, because we have only a handful of contained events, this search is less sensitive than studies using through-going muons.



 

Tuesday, November 10, 2020

Science in the age of Covid

 Hi,

Apologies because I have not updated this blog in quite a while.   I'm healthy, but Covid has brought many changes to my work life, and almost everything takes longer.    

Covid has had an enormous effect on scientists, and a somewhat lesser but still very sizable effect on science.  I am one of the fairly large fraction of physicists who mostly work on a computer.  So, I am able to work at home, and I do so.  There is a significant hit to productivity because I can no longer walk next door and talk to my colleagues - everything requires an appointment and a zoom call. 

Laboratory science has taken a much larger hit.  Lawrence Berkeley Lab, like most other research institutions, was almost entirely shut down for about six months, so all laboratory work stopped.  Now, we are slowly and carefully ramping up lab work, with a whole host of anti-Covid precautions, about physical separation, etc.   Of course, Covid-related work has become very high priority.  At LBNL, this includes using the Advanced Light Source (it produces intense beams of X-rays) to study the structure of important proteins, using the NERSC supercomputers to study protein-Covid interactions, and, of course, much biological research. 

Polar science has been affected even more.  There is a strong determination to keep Covid out of Antarctica.  To do so, the U. S. polar program has slashed the number of people who are going there this coming Astral summer.   The only activities that are supported are those that keep the U. S. stations running, and prevent damage to scientific infrastructure.   For IceCube, we will be able to swap winter-overs as the Pole, but not much more.   The usual transportation, using Air Force and NY Air National Guard LC-130 transports will not occur; instead there will be a small number of flights on Baslers (shown above, they are much upgraded DC-3s with turboprop engines), with very limited passenger space, and even more limited cargo transport.  

Everyone going to Antarctica will spend time quarantining in both the U. S. and New Zealand.  Even this has been tough - New Zealand is essentially closed to visitors, so special arrangements were required to allow polar program personnel in.   Fortunately, IceCube is running well, so the main effect is to put off some planned software upgrades, plus the surface deployment of new prototype air shower detectors.

For younger scientists without career positions,, the effects of Covid are especially drastic.  Colleges and universities are in dire straits financially, and have consequently cut faculty hiring.  One estimate I saw was that the number of advertised faculty positions is down by 70%.    This is a huge cut, especially for people who were positioning themselves to apply for jobs this year.  The situation in industry is better, but it is still not as good as last year.    Overall, physicists are probably no worse off than most other professions, but young people have a limited time window to apply for faculty positions, and budget limitations will create a squeeze that will likely last for several years.