Solar neutrino unit
The solar neutrino unit is a unit of Solar neutrino flux widely used in neutrino astronomy and radiochemical neutrino experiments. It is equal to the neutrino flux producing 10−36 captures per target atom per second. It is convenient given the very low event rates in radiochemical experiments. Typical rate is expected to be from tens SNU to hundred SNU.
There are two ways of detecting solar neutrinos: radiochemical and real time experiments. The principle of radiochemical experiments is the reaction of the form
where X is the parent nucleus with atomic number Z and mass number A, and Y is the daughter nucleus with atomic number Z+1 and mass number A.
The daughter nucleus's decay is used in the detection. Production rate of the daughter nucleus is given by
where
- is the solar neutrino flux
- is the cross section for the radiochemical reaction
- is the number of target atoms.