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Neutrino oscillation experiments show that neutrinos must be massive. The flavor eigenstates
$|\nu_\alpha\rangle$ of neutrinos can be mixed via the Maki-Nakagawa-Sakata (MNS) matrix V as follows [51]$|\nu_\alpha\rangle = \sum\limits_k V^\ast_{\alpha k} |\nu_k\rangle\; ,$
(1) where
$|\nu_k\rangle$ denotes the mass eigenstates of neutrinos. The propagation of the state$|\nu_k\rangle$ is described by a form of plane wave$|\nu_k(t,\vec{x})\rangle = \exp(-{\rm i}\Phi_k)|\nu_k\rangle\; .$
(2) Here, the phase
$\Phi_k$ is a solution of Klein-Gordon equation. In flat spacetime, it is of the form$\Phi_k = E_k t-\vec{p}_k\cdot \vec{x},$
(3) where
$E_k$ and$\vec{p}_k$ denote the energy and momentum of mass eigenstates$|\nu_k(t,\vec{x})\rangle$ , respectively. In this study, we only consider two flavor neutrinos ($\nu_e$ and$\nu_\mu$ ). The flux of tau neutrino ($\nu_\tau$ ) can be neglected according to GRBs model [52]. In this simplified case, the probability that neutrino produced as$|\nu_e\rangle$ at source is detected as$|\nu_e\rangle$ is given as [45]$\begin{split} P_{ee}\equiv|\langle\nu_e|\nu_e(s)\rangle|^2 = &1-\sin^2 2\theta\sin^2\left(\frac{\Phi_1-\Phi_2}{2}\right)\\ = &1-\sin^2 2\theta\sin^2\left(\frac{\Delta m^2 L}{4E}\right), \end{split}$
(4) where L denotes the distance between the source of neutrinos and the detector,
$\theta$ and$\Delta m^2$ denote the neutrino mixing angle and mass-squared difference, respectively.When neutrinos propagate through a massive region with high electron density, the electron neutrino will be scattered by electrons. Such effect can be evaluated by the effective Hamiltonian of neutrinos, and the effective potential is given as
$\mathcal{V} = \sqrt{2}G_{\rm F} n_{\rm e}$ [45], where$n_{\rm e}$ denotes number density of electron and$G_{\rm F}$ denotes Fermi constant. In a hot fireball model of GRBs, the number density of electron satisfies power-law distribution [20]$ n_{\rm e} = n_0\left(\frac{r}{r_0}\right)^{-N}, $
(5) where
$r_0$ is the base radius of the GRBs outflow,$n_0$ is the electron density at$r_0$ , and N is the power-law index.$N = 3$ or$N = 2$ , depending on whether the outflow is in the accelerating or coasting phase, and$r_0$ is assumed to be approximately$10^7$ cm. For a typical long GRBs of isotropic equivalent luminosity$L = 10^{51}$ erg/s and saturated Lorentz factor$\eta = 100$ , the initial electron density is estimated to be$n_0\approx 10^{26}$ ${\rm cm}^{-3}$ in the hot fireball model. In the magnetic jet model of GRBs, the initial electron density is about three orders of magnitude lower than the one in the hot fireball model [41, 42]. Therefore, the matter effect on the neutrinos can be used to distinguish the two models.Since the number density of electron in hot fireball model varies dramatically, the neutrinos propagate non-adiabatically through such media. In this case, the coherent effect of neutrino oscillations vanishes, and the averaged survival probability of electron neutrinos is given by the following formula [46]
$ P_{ee} = \frac{1}{2}+\left(\frac{1}{2}-\Theta(A-\Delta m^2\cos2\theta)P_c\right)\cos2\theta\cos2\theta_m(r_i), $
(6) where the effective neutrino mixing angle
$\theta_m(r_i)$ in matter at neutrino production point$r_i$ , and it is given as$ \tan2\theta_m = \frac{\Delta m^2\sin2\theta}{\Delta m^2\cos2\theta-A}, $
(7) $\Theta$ is the heaviside step function, and the parameter A is defined as$A\equiv \sqrt{2}G_{\rm F} n_{\rm e} E$ . In formula (6),$P_c$ represents the crossing probability between two instantaneous mass eigenstates, and it is of the form [46]$ P_c = \frac{\exp(-\pi\gamma F/2)-\exp(-\pi\gamma F/2\sin^2\theta)}{1-\exp(-\pi\gamma F/2\sin^2\theta)}, $
(8) where
$ F = \,_2F_1\left(\frac{N+1}{2N},\frac{2N+1}{2N};2;-\tan^22\theta\right) $
(9) is the hypergeometric function, and the adiabaticity parameter
$\gamma$ is defined as$ \gamma\equiv\frac{\Delta m^2\sin^2 2\theta}{2E\cos2\theta}\left(\left|\frac{{\rm d}n_{\rm e}}{n_{\rm e}{\rm d}r}\right|_{r_s}\right)^{-1}. $
(10) Here, the subscript
$r_s$ Eq. (10) denotes that this quantity is evaluate at resonant point, which is determined by$A(r_s) = \Delta m^2\cos2\theta$ .In the upper panel of Fig. 1 and Fig. 2, we plot the , and the crossing probability will approach
$\cos^2\theta$ if the neutrino energy is sufficiently high. In such high energy limit, the minimum value of$P_{ee}$ is just the resonant point and equals 0.5.Figure 1. (color online)
$P_{ee}$ and ratio versus E relations in$n_{\rm e}\propto r^{-3}$ case. The red-dashed line in each panel represents the classical result.Figure 2. (color online) The
$P_{ee}$ and ratio versus E relations in the$n_{\rm e}\propto r^{-2}$ case. The red-dashed line in each panel represents the classical result.High energy neutrinos are produced via the decays of charged pions (and kaons) followed by the decays of muons [45]. The neutrino flavor ratio
$\phi_e:\phi_\mu:\phi_\tau = 1:2:0$ is a good approximation, where the neutrino flux is defined as$\phi_\alpha = \phi_{\nu_\alpha}+\phi_{\bar{\nu}_\alpha}$ for ($\alpha = e,\mu,\tau$ ). However, the neutrino flavor ratio depends on the shape of the energy spectrum [52, 53]. For example, the neutrinos flavor ratio should be$\phi_e:\phi_\mu:\phi_\tau = 1:1.86:0$ if the neutrino fluxes with spectrum$\propto E^{-2}_\nu$ [52]. In hot fireball model of GRBs, the positron can be neglected. Thus, the matter effect for the anti neutrino can be ignored. In this study, we only consider the flavor ratio for neutrinos. In the lower panel of Fig. 1 and Fig. 2, we plot the flavor ratio versus E relation at different radius r. The initial flavor ratio is assumed to be$R_0 = \phi_{\nu_e}^0:\phi_{\nu_\mu}^0 = 1:2$ . The value of the initial flavor ratio will affect the magnitude of the peak of curve in the lower panel of Fig. 1 and Fig. 2, if$R_0\neq1:1$ . -
The gravitational effects on the propagation and oscillations of neutrinos are an interesting topic that has been extensively discussed in the literature [50, 54, 55]. In the reference given above, the evolution of mass eigenstates
$|\nu_k\rangle$ in curved spacetime still satisfies Eq. (2), the only change is the phase$\Phi_k$ , which is given as a covariant form$ \Phi_k = \int p_\mu^{(k)}{\rm d}x^\mu, $
(11) where
$p_\mu^{(k)} = m_k g_{\mu\nu}\displaystyle\frac{{\rm d}x^\nu}{{\rm d}s}$ , and$g_{\mu\nu}$ and${\rm d}s$ are the metric tensor and the line element, respectively. Schwarzschild spacetime is a good approximation for describing the spacetime of gravitational lensing system. Substituting the Schwarzschild metric into Eq. (11), one can obtain the phase for non-radial propagation neutrinos [50]$ \Phi_k = \frac{m_k^2(r_A+r_B)}{2E}\left(1-\frac{b^2}{2r_A r_B}+\frac{2GM}{r_A+r_B}\right), $
(12) where M is the mass of the gravitational source, b denotes the impact parameter,
$r_A$ and$r_B$ denote the distance between source and lens and the distance between lens and detector, respectively. One can find from Eq. (12) that the gravitational effect is considerable only for strong gravitational environment. In most gravitational systems, the distance or the source from the detector on earth,$X\equiv r_A+r_B$ , is of the order of Gpc, hence the gravitational effect on phase can be ignored.In a strong lensing system, neutrinos emitted from the source can propagate along two different paths (denoted as the long path L and short path S for convenience). Then, the evolution of flavor eigenstates
$|\nu_e(s)\rangle$ is given as$\begin{split} |\nu_e(s)\rangle =& C\sum\limits_{ {\rm path} = L,S}\cos\theta\exp(-{\rm i}\Phi_1^{ {\rm path}})|\nu_1\rangle\\&+\sin\theta\exp(-{\rm i}\Phi_2^{ {\rm path}})|\nu_2\rangle,\end{split} $
(13) where C is the normalization constant. By making use of the Eqs. (12) and (13), one can obtain the survival probability of strongly lensed electron neutrinos [50]
$ 1-P_{ee} = P_1+P_2, $
(14) where
$ \begin{split} P_1 =& \sin^2 2\theta\sin^2\left[\frac{\Delta m^2X}{4E}\left(1-\frac{\sum b^2}{4r_A r_B}\right)\right]\\&\times\cos\left(\frac{m_1^2X}{4E}\frac{\Delta b^2}{2r_Ar_B}\right)\cos\left(\frac{m_2^2X}{4E}\frac{\Delta b^2}{2r_Ar_B}\right)\; , \end{split}$
(15) and
$ P_2 = \sin^2 2\theta\sin^2\left(\frac{\sum m^2X}{4E}\frac{\Delta b^2}{4r_Ar_B}\right)\sin^2\left(\frac{\Delta m^2X}{4E}\frac{\Delta b^2}{4r_Ar_B}\right). $
(16) Here, we have defined
$\sum b^2\equiv b_L^2+b_S^2$ ,$\Delta b^2\equiv b_L^2-b_S^2$ , and$\sum m^2\equiv m_1^2+m_2^2$ in the above equations. The term$P_1$ in Eq. (14) represents the interference between the two mass eigenstates propagating along the same path, the term$P_2$ represents the interference between the mass eigenstates propagating along different paths.In strong lensing system, the typical scale of
$\Delta b$ is kpc, and the typical scale of X is Gpc. Therefore, the oscillation effect appears for$P_2$ if the energy of neutrinos reaches$\rm PeV$ . However, even for such high energy neutrinos, X is far larger than$4E/\Delta m^2$ . The term$\sin^2\left[\displaystyle\frac{\Delta m^2X}{4E}\left(1-\displaystyle\frac{\sum b^2}{4r_A r_B}\right)\right]$ should be averaged over many rounds of oscillations. The observed average survival probability of strongly lensed electron neutrinos should be$ 1-\bar{P}_{ee} = \bar{P}_1+P_2, $
(17) where
$ \bar{P}_1 = \frac{1}{2}\sin^2 2\theta\cos\left(\frac{m_1^2X}{4E}\frac{\Delta b^2}{2r_Ar_B}\right)\cos\left(\frac{m_2^2X}{4E}\frac{\Delta b^2}{2r_Ar_B}\right)\; , $
(18) unlike the neutrino oscillations of single path (4), the average survival probability of strongly lensed electron neutrinos (17) depends on both the neutrino mass-squared differences and the sum of neutrino mass-squared. Therefore, the coherent effect of strongly lensed neutrinos could determine the mass of neutrinos.
In the lower panels of Fig. 3 and Fig. 4, we show the
$\bar{P}_{ee}$ versus E relation in the normal hierarchical case ($m_1\ll m_2<m_3$ ) and inverted hierarchical case ($m_3\ll m_1<m_2$ ) [56], respectively. In the normal hierarchical case,$\sum m^2\simeq\Delta m^2$ . Then, the evolution of$\bar{P}_{ee}$ is mastered by a single wave number$\Delta m^2/4E$ . In the inverted hierarchical case,$\sum m^2\ll\Delta m^2$ . Then,$\bar{P}_{ee}$ evolves as a wave packet. These facts can be found directly from Fig. 3 and Fig. 4. GRBs can be a source of$\rm PeV$ neutrinos [21]. As a frequently observed astronomical phenomenon, the strongly lensed high energy neutrinos are likely to be detected in the future, which will carry the information of neutrino mass. In the calculation, the lens parameters are taken to be that of a typical strong lensing system HST14176+5226 [48]: the redshift of source$z_s = 3.4$ , the redshift of lensing plane$z_l = 0.809$ , Einstein ring radius$\theta_E = 1.489''$ , the misalignment angle$\beta = 0.13''$ . The distance are calculated in the flat$\Lambda$ CDM model with parameters$\Omega_M = 0.3$ ,$\Omega_\Lambda = 0.7$ and$H_0 = 70\; {\rm km\; s^{-1}\; Mpc^{-1}}$ .Figure 3. Normal hierarchical case:
$\Delta m^2\approx m_2^2\approx 7.53\times $ $10^{-5}\; {\rm eV}^2,$ $m_1^2\approx 0$ [56].Figure 4. Inverted hierarchical case:
$m_1\approx m_2\approx 0.05\; {\rm eV}$ ,$\Delta m^2\approx 7.53\times$ $ 10^{-5}\; {\rm eV}^2$ [56].
Matter effects and coherent effect of neutrinos produced from ${{\gamma}}$ -ray bursts
- Received Date: 2019-05-20
- Available Online: 2019-10-01
Abstract: Neutrinos produced from