Neutrino astronomy

Supernova neutrinos

Supernova neutrinos are weakly interactive elementary particles produced during a core-collapse supernova explosion. A massive star collapses at the end of its life, emitting of the order of 1058 neutrinos and antineutrinos in all lepton flavors. The luminosity of different neutrino and antineutrino species are roughly the same. They carry away about 99% of the gravitational energy of the dying star as a burst lasting tens of seconds. The typical supernova neutrino energies are 10–20 MeV. Supernovae are considered the strongest and most frequent source of cosmic neutrinos in the MeV energy range. Since neutrinos are generated in the core of a supernova, they play a crucial role in the star's collapse and explosion. Neutrino heating is believed to be a critical factor in supernova explosions. Therefore, observation of neutrinos from supernova provides detailed information about core collapse and the explosion mechanism. Further, neutrinos undergoing collective flavor conversions in a supernova's dense interior offers opportunities to study neutrino-neutrino interactions. The only supernova neutrino event detected so far is SN 1987A. Nevertheless, with current detector sensitivities, it is expected that thousands of neutrino events from a galactic core-collapse supernova would be observed. The next generation of experiments are designed to be sensitive to neutrinos from supernova explosions as far as Andromeda or beyond. The observation of supernova will broaden our understanding of various astrophysical and particle physics phenomena. Further, coincident detection of supernova neutrino in different experiments would provide an early alarm to astronomers about a supernova. (Wikipedia).

Supernova neutrinos
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Why I Love Neutrinos

Why I Love Neutrinos is a series spotlighting those mysterious, abundant, ghostly particles that are all around us. This installment features a compilation of international scientists. For more information on neutrinos, visit the Fermilab website at http://www.fnal.gov.

From playlist Why I Love Neutrinos

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What are Neutrinos?

Subscribe to our YouTube Channel for all the latest from World Science U. Visit our Website: http://www.worldscienceu.com/ Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/worldscienceu Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/worldscienceu

From playlist Science Unplugged: Neutrinos

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Neutrinos: Nature's Identity Thieves?

The oscillation of neutrinos from one variety to another has long been suspected, but was confirmed only about 15 years ago. In order for these oscillations to occur, neutrinos must have a mass, no matter how slight. Since neutrinos have long been thought to be massless, in a very real w

From playlist Neutrinos

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Why I Love Neutrinos - Elena Gramellini

Why I Love Neutrinos is a series spotlighting those mysterious, abundant, ghostly particles that are all around us. This installment features Yale Graduate Student Elena Gramellini. For more information on neutrinos, visit the Fermilab website at http://www.fnal.gov.

From playlist Why I Love Neutrinos

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Neutrinos: Messengers from a Violent Universe

In this 45-minute presentation Alex Himmel, Wilson Fellow at Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, explains how neutrinos might provide the answers to many questions that scientists have about the universe. The neutrino is a type of subatomic particle. They are produced in copious quantit

From playlist Neutrinos

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Neutrinos - Sixty Symbols

Billions of these mysterious particles are blasted down from the sun and pass through our bodies undetected. More videos at http://www.sixtysymbols.com/

From playlist Neutrinos - Sixty Symbols

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Neutrin...WHOA A SUPERNOVA! | Even Bananas 05

Boom! Let’s talk about some of the largest explosions in the universe: supernovae. We’re bursting to get into big supernova questions, including: Can supernova neutrinos go faster than light? What does a supernova warning system look like? And what do supernovae, neutrinos and Usain Bolt h

From playlist Neutrinos

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NOvA: Exploring Neutrino Mysteries

Neutrinos are a mystery to physicists. They exist in three different flavors and mass states and may be able to give hints about the origins of the matter-dominated universe. A new long-baseline experiment led by Fermilab called NOvA may provide some answers. There is a live feed of the f

From playlist Neutrinos

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Christian Ott: Modeling the Death of Massive Stars

PROGRAM: NUMERICAL RELATIVITY DATES: Monday 10 Jun, 2013 - Friday 05 Jul, 2013 VENUE: ICTS-TIFR, IISc Campus, Bangalore DETAL Numerical relativity deals with solving Einstein's field equations using supercomputers. Numerical relativity is an essential tool for the accurate modeling of a wi

From playlist Numerical Relativity

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Astronomy: The Supernova (2 of 10) The Story of The 1987 A Supernova

Visit http://ilectureonline.com for more math and science lectures! In this video I will discuss the 1987 A Supernova.

From playlist ASTRONOMY 20 SUPERNOVA - THE DEATH OF STARS

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Supernova Neutrinos by Sovan Chakravarty

DISCUSSION MEETING PARTICLE PHYSICS: PHENOMENA, PUZZLES, PROMISES ORGANIZERS: Amol Dighe, Rick S Gupta, Sreerup Raychaudhuri and Tuhin S Roy, Department of Theoretical Physics, TIFR, India DATE: 21 November 2022 to 23 November 2022 VENUE: Ramanujan Lecture Hall and Online While the LH

From playlist Particle Physics: Phenomena, Puzzles, Promises - (Edited)

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Anthony Mezzacappa - Computational Challenges with Modeling Core Collapse Supernovae - IPAM at UCLA

Recorded 4 October 2021. Anthony Mezzacappa of the University of Tennessee presents "The Computational Challenges associated with Modeling Core Collapse Supernovae and their Gravitational Wave Emission" at IPAM's Workshop I: Computational Challenges in Multi-Messenger Astrophysics. Abstrac

From playlist Workshop: Computational Challenges in Multi-Messenger Astrophysics

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Neutrino Quantum Kinetics in Neutron Star Mergers - Sherwood Richers III

Topic: Neutrino Quantum Kinetics in Neutron Star Mergers Speaker: Sherwood Richers III Affiliation: University of California, Berkeley Date: May 12, 2022 Following the collision of two compact objects, an accretion disk forms and from it matter is ejected that sources the universe's heavy

From playlist Astrophysics Seminar

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Betelgeuse might explode (in the next 150,000 years) - Sixty Symbols

Professor Mike Merrifield pours some cold water on Betelgeuse - but also explains what will happen when it DOES explode. More links and info below ↓ ↓ ↓ More videos with Mike Merrifield: http://bit.ly/Merrifield_Playlist Mike is an astronomer at the University of Nottingham - he tweets

From playlist Mike Merrifield - Sixty Symbols

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Astronomy - Ch. 21: Life & Death of a High Mass Star (9 of 12) The Final Moments (Part 2 of 3)

Visit http://ilectureonline.com for more math and science lectures! To donate: http://www.ilectureonline.com/donate https://www.patreon.com/user?u=3236071 We will learn the steps 12-16 of a total of 24 of what happens in the last moments of a super massive red giant. (Part 2 of 3) 12) “n

From playlist ASTRONOMY 21 LIFE & DEATH OF A HIGH MASS STAR

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NOvA: Building a Next Generation Neutrino Experiment

The NOvA neutrino experiment is searching for the answers to some of the most fundamental questions of the universe. This video documents how collaboration between government research institutions like Fermilab, academia and industry can create one of the largest neutrino detectors in the

From playlist Neutrinos

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Betelgeuse Is Dimmer Than We've Ever Seen It

Over the last weekend, astronomy Twitter started noting that the red giant Betelgeuse, the prominent shoulder of Orion was looking visibly dimmer in the sky, and I had a few people reach out to me and ask me if it was really happening and if I knew what was going on. This is exciting, of

From playlist Guide to Space

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