7,428 research outputs found
Behaviour in Magnetic Fields of Fast Conventional and Fine-Mesh Photomultipliers
The performance of both conventional and fine-mesh Hamamatsu photomultipliers
has been measured inside moderate magnetic fields. This has allowed the test of
effective shielding solutions for photomultipliers, to be used in
time-of-flight detectors based on scintillation counters. Both signal amplitude
reduction or deterioration of the timing properties inside magnetic fields have
been investigated
A homeostatic function of CXCR2 signalling in articular cartilage
Funding This work was funded by Arthritis Research UK (grants 17859, 17971, 19654), INNOCHEM EU FP6 (grant LSHB-CT-2005-51867), MRC (MR/K013076/1) and the William Harvey Research FoundationPeer reviewedPublisher PD
Performance of the MIND detector at a Neutrino Factory using realistic muon reconstruction
A Neutrino Factory producing an intense beam composed of nu_e(nubar_e) and
nubar_mu(nu_mu) from muon decays has been shown to have the greatest
sensitivity to the two currently unmeasured neutrino mixing parameters,
theta_13 and delta_CP . Using the `wrong-sign muon' signal to measure nu_e to
nu_mu(nubar_e to nubar_mu) oscillations in a 50 ktonne Magnetised Iron Neutrino
Detector (MIND) sensitivity to delta_CP could be maintained down to small
values of theta_13. However, the detector efficiencies used in previous studies
were calculated assuming perfect pattern recognition. In this paper, MIND is
re-assessed taking into account, for the first time, a realistic pattern
recognition for the muon candidate. Reoptimisation of the analysis utilises a
combination of methods, including a multivariate analysis similar to the one
used in MINOS, to maintain high efficiency while suppressing backgrounds,
ensuring that the signal selection efficiency and the background levels are
comparable or better than the ones in previous analyses
On Quantum Effects in Soft Leptogenesis
It has been recently shown that quantum Boltzman equations may be relevant
for leptogenesis. Quantum effects, which lead to a time-dependent CP asymmetry,
have been shown to be particularly important for resonant leptogenesis when the
asymmetry is generated by the decay of two nearly degenerate states. In this
work we investigate the impact of the use of quantum Boltzman equations in the
framework ``soft leptogenesis'' in which supersymmetry soft-breaking terms give
a small mass splitting between the CP-even and CP-odd right-handed sneutrino
states of a single generation and provide the CP-violating phase to generate
the lepton asymmetry.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures. Replacement to match published versio
The design and commissioning of the MICE upstream time-of-flight system
In the MICE experiment at RAL the upstream time-of-flight detectors are used
for particle identification in the incoming muon beam, for the experiment
trigger and for a precise timing (sigma_t ~ 50 ps) with respect to the
accelerating RF cavities working at 201 MHz. The construction of the upstream
section of the MICE time-of-flight system and the tests done to characterize
its individual components are shown. Detector timing resolutions ~50-60 ps were
achieved. Test beam performance and preliminary results obtained with beam at
RAL are reported.Comment: accepted on Nuclear Instruments and Methods
Information-Geometric Indicators of Chaos in Gaussian Models on Statistical Manifolds of Negative Ricci Curvature
A new information-geometric approach to chaotic dynamics on curved
statistical manifolds based on Entropic Dynamics (ED) is proposed. It is shown
that the hyperbolicity of a non-maximally symmetric 6N-dimensional statistical
manifold M_{s} underlying an ED Gaussian model describing an arbitrary system
of 3N degrees of freedom leads to linear information-geometric entropy growth
and to exponential divergence of the Jacobi vector field intensity, quantum and
classical features of chaos respectively.Comment: 8 pages, final version accepted for publicatio
Update on neutrino mixing in the early Universe
From the current cosmological observations of CMB and nuclear abundances we
show, with an analytic procedure, that the total effective number of extra
neutrino species . We also describe the possible
signatures of non standard effects that could be revealed in future CMB
observations. This cosmological information is then applied to neutrino mixing
models. Taking into account the recent results from the SNO and SuperKamiokande
experiments, disfavouring pure active to sterile neutrino oscillations, we show
that all 4 neutrino mixing models, both of 2+2 and 3+1 type, lead to a full
thermalization of the sterile neutrino flavor. Moreover such a sterile neutrino
production excludes the possibility of an electron neutrino asymmetry
generation and we conclude that , in
disagreement with the cosmological bound. This result is valid under the
assumption that the initial neutrino asymmetries are small. We suggest the
existence of a second sterile neutrino flavor, with mixing properties such to
generate a large electron neutrino asymmetry, as a possible way out.Comment: 29 pages, 3 figures; to appear on Phys.Rev.D; added discussion (at
page 19) and references; typos correcte
MEG Upgrade Proposal
We propose the continuation of the MEG experiment to search for the charged
lepton flavour violating decay (cLFV) \mu \to e \gamma, based on an upgrade of
the experiment, which aims for a sensitivity enhancement of one order of
magnitude compared to the final MEG result, down to the
level. The key features of this new MEG upgrade are an increased rate
capability of all detectors to enable running at the intensity frontier and
improved energy, angular and timing resolutions, for both the positron and
photon arms of the detector. On the positron-side a new low-mass, single
volume, high granularity tracker is envisaged, in combination with a new highly
segmented, fast timing counter array, to track positron from a thinner stopping
target. The photon-arm, with the largest liquid xenon (LXe) detector in the
world, totalling 900 l, will also be improved by increasing the granularity at
the incident face, by replacing the current photomultiplier tubes (PMTs) with a
larger number of smaller photosensors and optimizing the photosensor layout
also on the lateral faces. A new DAQ scheme involving the implementation of a
new combined readout board capable of integrating the diverse functions of
digitization, trigger capability and splitter functionality into one condensed
unit, is also under development. We describe here the status of the MEG
experiment, the scientific merits of the upgrade and the experimental methods
we plan to use.Comment: A. M. Baldini and T. Mori Spokespersons. Research proposal submitted
to the Paul Scherrer Institute Research Committee for Particle Physics at the
Ring Cyclotron. 131 Page
Dark matter search in a Beam-Dump eXperiment (BDX) at Jefferson Lab
MeV-GeV dark matter (DM) is theoretically well motivated but remarkably
unexplored. This Letter of Intent presents the MeV-GeV DM discovery potential
for a 1 m segmented plastic scintillator detector placed downstream of the
beam-dump at one of the high intensity JLab experimental Halls, receiving up to
10 electrons-on-target (EOT) in a one-year period. This experiment
(Beam-Dump eXperiment or BDX) is sensitive to DM-nucleon elastic scattering at
the level of a thousand counts per year, with very low threshold recoil
energies (1 MeV), and limited only by reducible cosmogenic backgrounds.
Sensitivity to DM-electron elastic scattering and/or inelastic DM would be
below 10 counts per year after requiring all electromagnetic showers in the
detector to exceed a few-hundred MeV, which dramatically reduces or altogether
eliminates all backgrounds. Detailed Monte Carlo simulations are in progress to
finalize the detector design and experimental set up. An existing 0.036 m
prototype based on the same technology will be used to validate simulations
with background rate estimates, driving the necessary RD towards an
optimized detector. The final detector design and experimental set up will be
presented in a full proposal to be submitted to the next JLab PAC. A fully
realized experiment would be sensitive to large regions of DM parameter space,
exceeding the discovery potential of existing and planned experiments by two
orders of magnitude in the MeV-GeV DM mass range.Comment: 28 pages, 17 figures, submitted to JLab PAC 4
Examining leptogenesis with lepton flavor violation and the dark matter abundance
Within a supersymmetric (SUSY) type-I seesaw framework with flavor-blind
universal boundary conditions, we study the consequences of requiring that the
observed baryon asymmetry of the Universe be explained by either thermal or
non-thermal leptogenesis. In the former case, we find that the parameter space
is very constrained. In the bulk and stop-coannihilation regions of mSUGRA
parameter space (that are consistent with the measured dark matter abundance),
lepton flavor-violating (LFV) processes are accessible at MEG and future
experiments. However, the very high reheat temperature of the Universe needed
after inflation (of about 10^{12} GeV) leads to a severe gravitino problem,
which disfavors either thermal leptogenesis or neutralino dark matter.
Non-thermal leptogenesis in the preheating phase from SUSY flat directions
relaxes the gravitino problem by lowering the required reheat temperature. The
baryon asymmetry can then be explained while preserving neutralino dark matter,
and for the bulk or stop-coannihilation regions LFV processes should be
observed in current or future experiments.Comment: 20 pages, 5 figures, 1 tabl
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