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arxiv: 1710.06724 · v2 · pith:3BMN6QXYnew · submitted 2017-10-18 · ⚛️ physics.geo-ph · hep-ex· hep-ph

Exploring the hidden interior of the Earth with directional neutrino measurements

classification ⚛️ physics.geo-ph hep-exhep-ph
keywords earthmeasurementsdecaysgeo-neutrinogeo-neutrinoshereinteriormantle
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Roughly 40% of the Earth's total heat flow is powered by radioactive decays in the crust and mantle. Geo-neutrinos produced by these decays provide important clues about the origin, formation and thermal evolution of our planet, as well as the composition of its interior. Previous measurements of geo-neutrinos have all relied on the detection of inverse beta decay reactions, which are insensitive to the contribution from potassium and do not provide model-independent information about the spatial distribution of geo-neutrino sources within the Earth. Here we present a method for measuring previously unresolved components of Earth's radiogenic heating using neutrino-electron elastic scattering and low-background, direction-sensitive tracking detectors. We calculate the exposures needed to probe various contributions to the total geo-neutrino flux, specifically those associated to potassium, the mantle and the core. The measurements proposed here chart a course for pioneering exploration of the veiled inner workings of the Earth.

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