arXiv:1407.3591 [astro-ph.HE]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources
High-energy neutrino fluxes and flavor ratio in the Earth atmosphere
T. S. Sinegovskaya, A. D. Morozova, S. I. Sinegovsky
Published 2014-07-14, updated 2014-12-17Version 2
We calculate the atmospheric neutrino fluxes in the energy range 100 GeV - 10 PeV with usage of several known hadronic models and few parametrizations of the cosmic ray spectra which take into account the knee. The calculations are compared with the atmospheric neutrino measurements by Frejus, AMANDA, IceCube and ANTARES. An analitic description is presented for the zenith-angle averaged conventional ($\nu_\mu+\bar\nu_\mu$) and ($\nu_e+\bar\nu_e$) energy spectra, which can be used to obtain test data of the neutrino event reconstruction in neutrino telescopes. The sum of the calculated atmospheric $\nu_\mu$ flux and the IceCube best-fit astrophysical flux gives the evidently higher flux as compared to the IceCube59 data, giving rise the question concerning the hypothesis of the equal flavor composition of the high-energy astrophysical neutrino flux. Calculations show that the transition from the atmospheric electron neutrino flux to the predominance of the astrophysical neutrinos occurs probably at 30-100 TeV, if the prompt neutrino component is taken into consideration. The neutrino flavor ratio, extracted from the IceCube data, does not reveal a trend to rise as it is expected for the conventional neutrino flux in the energy range 100 GeV - 30 TeV. The depression of the ratio $R_{\nu_\mu/\nu_e}$ probably indicates that the atmospheric electron neutrino flux obtained in the IceCube experiment contains an admixture of the astrophysical neutrinos in the range 10-50 TeV.