114 research outputs found
Recent Results from the MINOS experiment
MINOS is an accelerator neutrino oscillation experiment at Fermilab. An
intense high energy neutrino beam is produced at Fermilab and sent to a near
detector on the Fermilab site and also to a 5 kTon far detector 735 km away in
the Soudan mine in northern Minnesota. The experiment has now had several years
of running with millions of events in the near detector and hundreds of events
recorded in the far detector. I will report on the recent results from this
experiment which include precise measurement of , ~analysis
of neutral current data to limit the component of sterile neutrinos, and the
search for conversion. The focus will be on the analysis of
data for conversion. Using data from an exposure of
protons on target, we have selected electron type events
in both the near and the far detector. The near detector is used to measure the
background which is extrapolated to the far detector. We have found 35 events
in the signal region with a background expectation of . Using this observation we set a 90% C.L. limit of for and normal mass hierarchy. Further
analysis is under way to reduce backgrounds and improve sensitivity.Comment: This was prepared for the proceedings of the XIII International
Workshop on Neutrino Telescopes at the Istituto Veneto di Scienze, Lettere ed
Arti in Venice, Italy held on March 10-13, 2009. The presentation was on
behalf of the MINOS collaboratio
Muon Decay Asymmetries from Decays
We have examined the decay in which the
branching ratio, the muon energy asymmetry and the muon decay asymmetry could
be measured. In particular, we find that within the Standard Model the
longitudinal polarization () of the muon is proportional to the direct CP
violating amplitude. On the other hand the energy asymmetry and the
out-of-plane polarization () depend on both indirect and direct CP
violating amplitudes. Although the branching ratio is small and difficult to
measure because of background, the asymmetries could be large (1) in
the Standard Model. A combined analysis of the energy asymmetry, and
could be used to separate indirect CPV, direct CPV, and CP conserving
contributions to the decay.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, To be Published in Physical Review
Status of the MINOS experiment
I will present the status of the long baseline neutrino oscillation
experiment MINOS at Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (Fermilab). I will
summarize the status of the detector and beam construction, the expected event
rates and sensitivity to physics. I will also comment on possible future plans
to improve the performance of the experiment.Comment: Invited talk at the Seventh International Workshop on Tau Lepton
Physics (TAU02), Santa Cruz, Ca, USA, Sept 2002, 7 pages, 6 figures, LaTeX
Higher res figures at http://minos.phy.bnl.gov/~diwan/tau02_th08.p
Tests of the Standard Model Using Muon Polarization Asymmetries in Kaon Decays
We have examined the physics and the experimental feasibility of studying
various kaon decay processes in which the polarization of a muon in the final
state is measured. Valuable information on CP violation, the quark mixing (CKM)
matrix, and new physics can be obtained from such measurements. We have
considered muon polarization in K_L to mu+ mu- and K to pi mu+ mu- decays.
Although the effects are small, or difficult to measure because of the small
branching ratios involved, these studies could provide clean measurements of
the CKM parameters. The experimental difficulty appears comparable to the
observation of K to pi nu barnu. New sources of physics, involving non-standard
CP violation, could produce effects observable in these measurements. Limits
from new results on the neutron and electron electric dipole moment, and
epsilon-prime over epsilon in neutral kaon decays, do not eliminate certain
models that could contribute to the signal. A detailed examination of muon
polarization out of the decay plane in KMU3 and radiative KMU2 decays also
appears to be of interest. With current kaon beams and detector techniques, it
is possible to measure the T-violating polarization for KMU3 with uncertainties
approaching 0.0001. This level of sensitivity would provide an interesting
probe of new physics.Comment: 24 pages, 3 figures, To be published in the International Journal of
Modern Physics
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