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Featured researches published by L. Wille.


Physical Review D | 2016

On the Charm Contribution to the Atmospheric Neutrino Flux

F. Halzen; L. Wille

We revisit the estimate of the charm particle contribution to the atmospheric neutrino flux that is expected to dominate at high energies because long-lived high-energy pions and kaons interact in the atmosphere before decaying into neutrinos. We focus on the production of forward charm particles which carry a large fraction of the momentum of the incident proton. In the case of strange particles, such a component is familiar from the abundant production of


Physical Review D | 2015

High-energy behavior of photon, neutrino, and proton cross sections

C. Arguelles; F. Halzen; L. Wille; Mike Kroll; Mary Hall Reno

K^{+} \Lambda


Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics | 2018

Unified atmospheric neutrino passing fractions for large-scale neutrino telescopes

Carlos A. Argüelles; Sergio Palomares-Ruiz; Austin Schneider; L. Wille; Tianlu Yuan

pairs. These forward charm particles can dominate the high-energy atmospheric neutrino flux in underground experiments. Modern collider experiments have no coverage in the very large rapidity region where charm forward pair production dominates. Using archival accelerator data as well as IceCube measurements of atmospheric electron and muon neutrino fluxes, we obtain an upper limit on forward


arXiv: High Energy Physics - Phenomenology | 2016

Upper Limit on Forward Charm Contribution to Atmospheric Neutrino Flux

F. Halzen; L. Wille

\bar{D}^0 \Lambda_c


Archive | 2016

Prompt Neutrino Flux from Forward Charm Production

F. Halzen; L. Wille

pair production and on the associated flux of high-energy atmospheric neutrinos. We conclude that the prompt flux may dominate the much-studied central component and represent a significant contribution to the TeV atmospheric neutrino flux. Importantly, it cannot accommodate the PeV flux of high-energy cosmic neutrinos, nor the excess of events observed by IceCube in the 30--200 TeV energy range indicating either structure in the flux of cosmic accelerators, or a presence of more than one component in the cosmic flux observed.

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F. Halzen

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Austin Schneider

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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C. Arguelles

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Carlos A. Argüelles

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Mike Kroll

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Tianlu Yuan

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Sergio Palomares-Ruiz

Spanish National Research Council

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