Width of a beta-decay-induced antineutrino wave packet

arxiv(2023)

引用 5|浏览4
暂无评分
摘要
The time evolution of a neutrino is dependent on its initial properties at creation including flavor, energy, and wave packet size. There exists no solid theoretical prediction for the latter property in the context of nuclear beta decay, despite the importance of this process for the past, present, and future of neutrino experimentation. In this paper, we provide a quantitative prediction for the size of a beta-decay-induced electron antineutrino wave packet by treating the parent nucleus decaying to an entangled antineutrino-recoil system using the formalism of open quantum systems. Of central importance is the delocalization scale of the parent particle. We construct a systematic description of the hierarchy of localizing entanglements that provides an unambiguous statement of the relevant localization scale, found to be closely related to the diameter of the parent nucleus (e.g., similar to 5-6 fm for beta-decaying fission daughters) and as low as the typical nucleon-nucleon correlation distance (similar to 1 fm). Inside a nuclear reactor, for example, this translates to initial electron antineutrino wave packet widths in the sigma(v-x) similar to 10-400 pm range for E-(v) over bare > 1.8 MeV, with dependencies on decaying nucleus size, the emitted antineutrino energy, and the kinematics of the recoiling system. Wave packet sizes in this envelope do not produce an observable effect on oscillation probability in foreseeable reactor experiments in the standard three-neutrino model, including JUNO which is expected to be sensitive to sigma(v-x) less than or similar to 3 pm.
更多
查看译文
关键词
beta-decay-induced
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要