3,118 research outputs found
Ultra High Energy neutrinos with the Pierre Auger Observatory
texte intégral disponible sur http://proc.sf2a.asso.fr/2006/2006sf2a.conf..0115B.pdfInternational audienceThe Pierre Auger Observatory was designed to observe cosmic rays of ultra-high energy. It has also the capability to observe rare neutrino-induced showers. An evaluation of the sensitivity of the Surface Detector is presented and a procedure to discriminate them from the background is described
A procedure to produce excess, probability and significance maps and to compute point-sources flux upper limits
A short note to propose a procedure to construct excess maps, probability
maps and to calculate point source flux upper limits.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figure
New methods of evaluation of the flavour composition in annihilation by double hemisphere tagging at LEP/SLC energies
Two new methods are proposed to extract the flavour contents of the events produced at LEP/SLC, together with the classification matrix of a tagging by hemispheres. By utilising the tagging obtained in both hemispheres, the efficiencies, backgrounds and flavour compositions are directly obtained by fitting the data. A minimal dependence on modelling and a consistent treatment of systematic errors are achieved by applying these methods. The choice of the tagging algorithm is irrelevant in the methods, provided that similar efficiencies are reached. As an example, a multivariate analysis technique combining the tracking information given by a microvertex detector has been applied to extract the Z → b overlineb branching ratio using a standard simulation of a LEP/SLC experiment
The Drift Chambers Of The Nomad Experiment
We present a detailed description of the drift chambers used as an active
target and a tracking device in the NOMAD experiment at CERN. The main
characteristics of these chambers are a large area, a self supporting structure
made of light composite materials and a low cost. A spatial resolution of 150
microns has been achieved with a single hit efficiency of 97%.Comment: 42 pages, 26 figure
Tau Neutrinos in the Auger Observatory : A New Window to UHECR Sources
The cosmic ray spectrum has been shown to extend well beyond 10^{20}eV. With
nearly 20 events observed in the last 40 years, it is now established that
particles are accelerated or produced in the universe with energies near
10^{21}eV. In all production models neutrinos and photons are part of the
cosmic ray flux. In acceleration models (bottom-up models), they are produced
as secondaries of the possible interactions of the accelerated charged
particle; in direct production models (top-down models) they are a dominant
fraction of the decay chain. In addition, hadrons above the GZK threshold
energy will also produce, along their path in the Universe, neutrinos and
photons as secondaries of the pion photo-production processes. Therefore,
photons and neutrinos are very distinctive signatures of the nature and
distribution of the potential sources of ultra high energy cosmic rays. In the
following we describe the tau neutrino detection and identification
capabilities of the Auger observatory. We show that in the range
3x10^{17}-3x10^{20}eV the Auger effective apperture reaches a few tenths of
km^2.sr, making the observatory sensitive to fluxes as low as a few tau
neutrinos per km^2.sr.year. In the hypothesis of nu_mu nu_tau oscillations
with full mixing, this sensitivity allows to probe the GZK cutoff as well as to
provide model independent constraints on the mechanisms of production of ultra
high energy cosmic rays.Comment: 10 pages, 11 figures, accepted by Astroparticle physic
The Particle Physics Reach of High-Energy Neutrino Astronomy
We discuss the prospects for high-energy neutrino astronomy to study particle
physics in the energy regime comparable to and beyond that obtainable at the
current and planned colliders. We describe the various signatures of
high-energy cosmic neutrinos expected in both neutrino telescopes and air
shower experiments and discuss these measurements within the context of
theoretical models with a quantum gravity or string scale near a TeV,
supersymmetry and scenarios with interactions induced by electroweak
instantons. We attempt to access the particle physics reach of these
experiments.Comment: Mini-review article for New Journal of Physics, "Focus on Neutrinos"
issue. 27 pages, 11 figure
No-thinning simulations of extensive air showers and small scale fluctuations at the ground level
The particle density in extensive air showers fluctuates at the ground level.
These fluctuations, at the scale of the scintillator detector size (several
meters), lead to the diversity of the individual detector responses. Therefore,
small scale fluctuations contribute to the error in the estimation of the
primary energy by a ground array. This contribution is shown to be
non-Gaussian. The impact on the primary energy spectrum measured by a ground
array is estimated. Ir is argued that super-GZK events observed by AGASA
experiment do not result from the energy overestimation, due to small scale
fluctuations, of lower energy events.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure
Sublethal toxicant effects with dynamic energy budget theory: model formulation
We develop and test a general modeling framework to describe the sublethal effects of pollutants by adding toxicity modules to an established dynamic energy budget (DEB) model. The DEB model describes the rates of energy acquisition and expenditure by individual organisms; the toxicity modules describe how toxicants affect these rates by changing the value of one or more DEB parameters, notably the parameters quantifying the rates of feeding and maintenance. We investigate four toxicity modules that assume: (1) effects on feeding only; (2) effects on maintenance only; (3) effects on feeding and maintenance with similar values for the toxicity parameters; and (4) effects on feeding and maintenance with different values for the toxicity parameters. We test the toxicity modules by fitting each to published data on feeding, respiration, growth and reproduction. Among the pollutants tested are metals (mercury and copper) and various organic compounds (chlorophenols, toluene, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, tetradifon and pyridine); organisms include mussels, oysters, earthworms, water fleas and zebrafish. In most cases, the data sets could be adequately described with any of the toxicity modules, and no single module gave superior fits to all data sets. We therefore propose that for many applications, it is reasonable to use the most general and parameter sparse module, i.e. module 3 that assumes similar effects on feeding and maintenance, as a default. For one example (water fleas), we use parameter estimates to calculate the impact of food availability and toxicant levels on the long term population growth rate
Neutrino Detection with Inclined Air Showers
The possibilities of detecting high energy neutrinos through inclined showers
produced in the atmosphere are addressed with an emphasis on the detection of
air showers by arrays of particle detectors. Rates of inclined showers produced
by both down-going neutrino interactions and by up-coming decays from
earth-skimming neutrinos as a function of shower energy are calculated with
analytical methods using two sample neutrino fluxes with different spectral
indices. The relative contributions from different flavors and charged, neutral
current and resonant interactions are compared for down-going neutrinos
interacting in the atmosphere. No detailed description of detectors is
attempted but rough energy thresholds are implemented to establish the ranges
of energies which are more suitable for neutrino detection through inclined
showers. Down-going and up-coming rates are compared.Comment: Submitted to New Journal of Physic
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Search for lepton-flavour-violating decays of Higgs-like bosons.
A search is presented for a Higgs-like boson with mass in the range 45 to 195 GeV/c2 decaying into a muon and a tau lepton. The dataset consists of proton-proton interactions at a centre-of-mass energy of 8 TeV , collected by the LHCb experiment, corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 2 fb-1 . The tau leptons are reconstructed in both leptonic and hadronic decay channels. An upper limit on the production cross-section multiplied by the branching fraction at 95% confidence level is set and ranges from 22 pb for a boson mass of 45 GeV/c2 to 4 pb for a mass of 195 GeV/c2
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