EGU24-11719, updated on 09 Mar 2024
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu24-11719
EGU General Assembly 2024
© Author(s) 2024. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Prospects of Neutrino Oscillation Tomography of the Earth 

Veronique Van Elewyck1,2, Joao Coelho1, Yael Armando Deniz Hernandez3, Stephanie Durand4, Nobuaki Fuji5,2, Edouard Kaminski5, Lukas Maderer1, Eric Mittelstaedt3, and Rebekah Pestes1,5
Veronique Van Elewyck et al.
  • 1Université Paris Cité, CNRS, Astroparticule et Cosmologie, France (elewyck@apc.in2p3.fr)
  • 2Institut Universitaire de France
  • 3University of Idaho, Department of Earth and Spatial Sciences, USA
  • 4Laboratoire de Géologie de Lyon : Terre, Planètes, Environnement, CNRS, UMR 5276, École Normale Supérieure de Lyon, Université de Lyon, Université Claude Bernard Lyon , France1
  • 5Université Paris Cité, Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris, CNRS

Much has been learned about the deep Earth through a combination of geophysical constraints, theories of Earth’s formation, and seismic measurements. However, such methods alone cannot directly resolve the full structure of the inner Earth, e.g. in terms of matter density, composition and temperature distributions.

Complementary information about Earth’s interior can be provided by small, nearly massless elementary particles called neutrinos that propagate through the Earth. Neutrinos exist in different flavours and are known to experience a quantum phenomenon of flavour oscillation as they propagate. With an extremely small chance of interacting with matter, neutrinos can travel long distances through very dense materials (e.g., the Earth’s core). For atmospheric neutrinos of energy ~GeV crossing the Earth, the flavour oscillation patterns are distorted due to coherent forward scattering on electrons along their path. Measuring the flavour, energy and angular distributions of such neutrinos therefore provides sensitivity to a new observable of geophysical interest: the electron number density in the layers of matter traversed.

After a short introduction to the concepts of neutrino oscillation tomography, we will discuss the potential of this method to address open questions concerning inner Earth's structure and composition (such as the amount of light elements in the core and the nature of LLSVPs), the status of sensitivity studies, and the perspectives opened by the next generation of atmospheric neutrino detectors.

How to cite: Van Elewyck, V., Coelho, J., Deniz Hernandez, Y. A., Durand, S., Fuji, N., Kaminski, E., Maderer, L., Mittelstaedt, E., and Pestes, R.: Prospects of Neutrino Oscillation Tomography of the Earth , EGU General Assembly 2024, Vienna, Austria, 14–19 Apr 2024, EGU24-11719, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu24-11719, 2024.