8-10 May 2017
Discovery Building
US/Central timezone

High-energy neutrinos, cosmic rays, and gamma rays from gamma-ray bursts

9 May 2017, 14:48
18m
Northwoods (Union South)

Northwoods

Union South

Gamma Rays - Convenor: Reshmi Mukherjee, Columbia Gamma Rays

Speaker

Dr Mauricio Bustamante (Center for Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics, The Ohio State University)

Description

Ultra-high-energy cosmic rays and high-energy astrophysical neutrinos are routinely detected, but their sources remain unknown. Gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) have long been considered attractive candidate sources. Recently, the lack of neutrinos detected in coincidence with known GRBs has motivated revisions of the multi-messenger emission mechanism --- gamma rays, cosmic rays, neutrinos --- from within the GRB jet. By embedding this revised mechanism in a simulation of multiple emission regions within the jet, we obtain a robust prediction for the minimal diffuse GRB neutrino flux, likely within the reach of the planned detector upgrade, IceCube-Gen2. Further, we show that, by looking for features in the shape of the GRB gamma-ray light curve, we can assess whether a particular burst is likely to be an intense neutrino source.

Primary author

Dr Mauricio Bustamante (Center for Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics, The Ohio State University)

Co-authors

Mr Jonas Heinze (DESY) Prof. Kohta Murase (Pennsylvania State University) Dr Walter Winter (DESY)

Presentation Materials