132 research outputs found
Observation of muon neutrino disappearance with the MINOS detectors in the NuMI neutrino beam
This letter reports results from the MINOS experiment based on its initial exposure to neutrinos from the Fermilab NuMI beam. The rate and energy spectra of charged current muon neutrino interactions are compared in two detectors located along the beam axis at distances of 1 km and 735 km. With 1.27 x 10^{20} 120 GeV protons incident on the NuMI target, 215 events with energies below 30 GeV are observed at the Far Detector, compared to an expectation of 336 \pm 14.4 events. The data are consistent with muon neutrino disappearance via oscillation with |\Delta m^2_{23}| = 2.74^{+0.44}_{-0.26} x 10^{-3} eV^2/c^4 and sin^2(2\theta_{23}) > 0.87 (at 60% C.L.)
New Results from the MINOS Experiment
In this paper we present the latest results from the MINOS Experiment. This
includes a new measurement of the atmospheric neutrino oscillation parameters
based on 3.36 x 10^20 protons-on-target of data and a first analysis of neutral
current events in the Far Detector. The prospects for nu-e appearance
measurements in MINOS are also discussed.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, for the Proceedings of the Neutrino 2008
Conference, Christchurch, N
Precision measurement of the speed of propagation of neutrinos using the MINOS detectors
We report a two-detector measurement of the propagation speed of neutrinos over a baseline of 734 km. The measurement was made with the NuMI beam at Fermilab between the near and far MINOS detectors. The fractional difference between the neutrino speed and the speed of light is determined to be , consistent with relativistic neutrinos
A search for sterile neutrinos mixing with muon neutrinos in MINOS
We report results of a search for oscillations involving a light sterile neutrino over distances of 1.04km and 735km in a __-dominated beam with peak energy of 3 GeV. The data, from an exposure of 10:56 _ 1020 protons-on-target, are analyzed using a phenomenological model with one sterile neutrino. We constrain the mixing parameters _24 and _m2 41 and set limits on parameters of the four-dimensional PMNS matrix, jU_4j2 and jU_4j2, under the assumption that mixing between _e and _s is negligible (jUe4j2 = 0). No evidence for __ ! _s transitions is found and we set a world-leading limit on _24 for values of _m2 41 . 1 eV2
Neutrino Beams From Electron Capture at High Gamma
We investigate the potential of a flavor pure high gamma electron capture
electron neutrino beam directed towards a large water cherenkov detector with
500 kt fiducial mass. The energy of the neutrinos is reconstructed by the
position measurement within the detector and superb energy resolution
capabilities could be achieved. We estimate the requirements for such a
scenario to be competitive to a neutrino/anti-neutrino running at a neutrino
factory with less accurate energy resolution. Although the requirements turn
out to be extreme, in principle such a scenario could achieve as good abilities
to resolve correlations and degeneracies in the search for sin^2(2 theta_13)
and delta_CP as a standard neutrino factory experiment.Comment: 21 pages, 7 figures, revised version, to appear in JHEP, Fig.7
extended, minnor changes, results unchange
Global neutrino data and recent reactor fluxes: status of three-flavour oscillation parameters
We present the results of a global neutrino oscillation data analysis within
the three-flavour framework. We include latest results from the MINOS
long-baseline experiment (including electron neutrino appearance as well as
anti-neutrino data), updating all relevant solar (SK II+III), atmospheric (SK
I+II+III) and reactor (KamLAND) data. Furthermore, we include a recent
re-calculation of the anti-neutrino fluxes emitted from nuclear reactors. These
results have important consequences for the analysis of reactor experiments and
in particular for the status of the mixing angle . In our
recommended default analysis we find from the global fit that the hint for
non-zero remains weak, at 1.8 for both neutrino mass
hierarchy schemes. However, we discuss in detail the dependence of these
results on assumptions concerning the reactor neutrino analysis.Comment: 15 pages, 10 figures and 2 tables, v2: corrected version, main
conclusions unchanged, references adde
A low energy optimization of the CERN-NGS neutrino beam for a theta_{13} driven neutrino oscillation search
The possibility to improve the CERN to Gran Sasso neutrino beam performances
for theta_{13} searches is investigated. We show that by an appropriate
optimization of the target and focusing optics of the present CNGS design, we
can increase the flux of low energy neutrinos by about a factor 5 compared to
the current tau optimized focalisation. With the ICARUS 2.35 kton detector at
LNGS and in case of negative result, this would allow to improve the limit to
sin^22 theta_{13} by an order of magnitude better than the current limit of
CHOOZ at Delta m^2 approximately 3 times 10^{-3} eV^2 within 5 years of nominal
CNGS running. This is by far the most sensitive setup of the currently approved
long-baseline experiments and is competitive with the proposed JHF superbeam.Comment: 19 pages, 8 figure
Reactor Neutrino Experiments with a Large Liquid Scintillator Detector
We discuss several new ideas for reactor neutrino oscillation experiments
with a Large Liquid Scintillator Detector. We consider two different scenarios
for a measurement of the small mixing angle with a mobile
source: a nuclear-powered ship, such as a submarine or an
icebreaker, and a land-based scenario with a mobile reactor. The former setup
can achieve a sensitivity to at the 90%
confidence level, while the latter performs only slightly better than Double
Chooz. Furthermore, we study the precision that can be achieved for the solar
parameters, and , with a mobile reactor
and with a conventional power station. With the mobile reactor, a precision
slightly better than from current global fit data is possible, while with a
power reactor, the accuracy can be reduced to less than 1%. Such a precision is
crucial for testing theoretical models, e.g. quark-lepton complementarity.Comment: 18 pages, 3 figures, 2 tables, revised version, to appear in JHEP,
Fig. 1 extended, Formula added, minor changes, results unchange
Lepton flavor violation in SUSY left-right symmetric theories
The seesaw mechanism is the most popular explanation for the smallness of
neutrino masses. However, its high scale makes direct tests impossible and only
indirect signals at low energies are reachable for collider experiments. One of
these indirect links with the high scale is lepton flavor violation (LFV). We
discuss LFV decays of sleptons in the context of a SUSY left-right symmetric
model that naturally incorporates the seesaw mechanism. This non-minimal
embedding of the seesaw leads to observable LFV effects in the right-handed
sleptons sector, contrary to minimal models where these are found to be totally
negligible. Therefore, LFV observables can be used as a powerful tool to study
physics right below the GUT scale.Comment: To appear in the proceedings of PASCOS 2010, the 16th International
Symposium on Particles, Strings and Cosmology, Valencia, Spai
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