11,182 research outputs found

    Three-family oscillations using neutrinos from muon beams at very long baseline

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    The planned LBL experiments will be able to prove the hypothesis of flavor oscillation between muon and tau neutrinos. We explore the possibility of a second generation long baseline experiment at very long baseline, i.e. L in the range 5000-7000 km. This distance requires intense neutrino beams that could be available from very intense muon beams as those needed for μ\mu colliders. Such baselines allow the study of neutrino oscillations with E/L2×103eV2E/L \approx 2\times 10^{-3} eV^2 with neutrinos of energy Eν10GeVE_\nu \approx 10 GeV, i.e. above tau threshold. Moreover, matter effects inside the Earth could lead to observable effects in νeνμ\nu_e \to \nu_\mu oscillations. These effects are interchanged between neutrinos and antineutrinos, and therefore they can be tested by comparing the oscillated spectra obtained running the storage ring with positive and negative muons.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure

    A medium baseline search for νμνe\nu_\mu\to\nu_e oscillations at a ν\nu beam from muon decays

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    The accurate knowledge of the νˉe(νμ)\bar\nu_e (\nu_\mu) beam produced in μ\mu^- decays and the absence of νe(νˉμ)\nu_e (\bar\nu_\mu) contamination, make a future muon storage ring the ideal place to look for \numunue (\numubarnuebar) oscillations. Using a detector capable of electron and muon identification with charge discrimination (e.g., the presently running NOMAD experiment), good sensitivities to \numunue (\numubarnuebar) oscillations could be achieved. With the CERN-PS as a proton driver for a muon storage ring of the kind envisaged for a μ\mu-collider, the LSND claim would be confirmed or disproved in a few years of running.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure

    The flavor of neutrinos in muon decays at a neutrino factory and the LSND puzzle

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    The accurate prediction of the neutrino beam produced in muon decays and the absence of opposite helicity contamination for a particular neutrino flavor make a future neutrino factory the ideal place to look for the lepton flavor violating (LFV) decays of the kind \mu^+\ra e^+\nuebar\numu and lepton number violating (LNV) processes like \mu^-\ra e^-\nue\numu. Excellent sensitivities can be achieved using a detector capable of muon and/or electron identification with charge discrimination. This would allow to set experimental limits that improve current ones by more than two orders of magnitude and test the hypothesis that the LSND excess is due to such anomalous decays, rather than neutrino flavor oscillations in vacuum.Comment: 19 pages, 4 figure

    Computational probabilistic quantification of pro-arrhythmic risk from scar and left-to-right heterogeneity in the human ventricles

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    Both scar and left-to-right ventricular (LV/RV) differences in repolarization properties have been implicated as risk factors for lethal arrhythmias. As a possible mechanism for the initiation of re-entry, a recent study has indicated that LV/RV heterogeneities in action potential duration (APD) adaptation can cause a transient increase in APD dispersion following rate acceleration, promoting unidirectional block of conduction at the LV/RV junction. In the presence of an ischemic region and ectopic stimulation, a pathological dispersion in repolarization has been suggested to increase the risk of electrical re-entry. However, the exact location and timing of the ectopic activation play a crucial role in initiation of re-entry, and certain combinations may lead to re-entry even under normal LV/RV dispersion in repolarization. This suggests that the phenomenon needs to be investigated in a quantitative way. In this study we employ a computationally efficient, phenomenological model in order to investigate the proarrhythmic properties of a range of combinations of position and timing of an ectopic activation. This allows us to probabilistically study how increasing interventricular dispersion of repolarization increases arrhythmic risk. Results indicate that a larger LV/RV dispersion in repolarization allows ectopic beats to initiate re-entry during a significantly larger time window and from a greater number of locations compared to the case of smaller LV/RV dispersion

    On the energy and baseline optimization to study effects related to the δ-phase (CP-/T-violation) in neutrino oscillations at a neutrino factory

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    In this paper we discuss the detection of CP- and T-violation effects in the framework of a neutrino factory. We introduce three quantities, which are good discriminants for a non-vanishing complex phase (δ) in the 3 × 3 neutrino mixing matrix: Δδ, ΔCP and ΔT. We find that these three discriminants (in vacuum) all scale with L/Ev, where L is the baseline and Ev the neutrino energy. Matter effects modify the scaling, but these effects are large enough to spoil the sensitivity only for baselines larger than 5000 km. So, in the hypothesis of constant neutrino factory power (i.e., number of muons inversely proportional to muon energy), the sensitivity on the δ-phase is independent of the baseline chosen. Specially interesting is the direct measurement of T-violation from the "wrong-sign" electron channel (i.e., the ΔT discriminant), which involves a comparison of the ve → vμ and vμ → ve oscillation rates. However, the vμ → ve measurement requires magnetic discrimination of the electron charge, experimentally very challenging in a neutrino detector. Since the direction of the electron curvature has to be estimated before the start of the electromagnetic shower, low-energy neutrino beams and hence short baselines, are preferred. In this paper we show, as an example, the exclusion regions in the Δm212-δ plane using the ΔCP and ΔT discriminants for two concrete cases keeping the same L/Ev ratio (730 km/7.5 GeV and 2900 km/30 GeV). We obtain a similar excluded region provided that the electron detection efficiency is ∼20% and the charge confusion 0.1%. The Δm212 compatible with the LMA solar data can be tested with a flux of 5 × 1021 muons. We compare these results with the fit of the visible energy distributions. © 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved

    Detection of polarization from the E^4\Pi-A^4\Pi system of FeH in sunspot spectra

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    Here we report the first detection of polarization signals induced by the Zeeman effect in spectral lines of the E^4\Pi-A^4\Pi system of FeH located around 1.6 μ\mum. Motivated by the tentative detection of this band in the intensity spectrum of late-type dwarfs, we have investigated the full Stokes sunspot spectrum finding circular and linear polarization signatures that we associate with the FeH lines of the E^4\Pi-A^4\Pi band system. We investigate the Zeeman effect in these molecular transitions pointing out that in Hund's case (a) coupling the effective Land\'e factors are never negative. For this reason, the fact that our spectropolarimetric observations indicate that the Land\'e factors of pairs of FeH lines have opposite signs, prompt us to conclude that the E^4\Pi-A^4\Pi system must be in intermediate angular momentum coupling between Hund's cases (a) and (b). We emphasize that theoretical and/or laboratory investigations of this molecular system are urgently needed for exploiting its promising diagnostic capabilities.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journal Letter

    On the energy and baseline optimization to study effects related to the δ\delta-phase (CP-/T-violation) in neutrino oscillations at a Neutrino Factory

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    In this paper we discuss the detection of CP and T-violation effects in the framework of a neutrino factory. We introduce three quantities, which are good discriminants for a non vanishing complex phase (δ\delta) in the 3×33\times 3 neutrino mixing matrix. We find that these three discriminants (in vacuum) all scale with L/EνL/E_{\nu}. Matter effects modify the scaling, but these effects are large enough to spoil the sensitivity only for baselines larger than 5000 km. So, in the hypothesis of constant neutrino factory power, the sensitivity on the δ\delta-phase is independent of the baseline chosen. Specially interesting is the direct measurement of T-violation from the ``wrong-sign'' electron channel, which involves a comparison of the \nue\ra\numu and \numu\ra\nue oscillation rates. However, the \numu\ra\nue measurement requires magnetic discrimination of the electron charge, experimentally very challenging in a neutrino detector: low-energy neutrino beams and hence short baselines, are preferred. In this paper we show the exclusion regions in the Δm122δ\Delta m^2_{12} - \delta plane for two concrete cases. We obtain a similar excluded region provided that the electron detection efficiency is \sim20% and the charge confusion 0.1%. The Δm122\Delta m^2_{12} compatible with the LMA solar data can be tested with a flux of 5×1021\times 10^{21} muons. We compare these results with the fit of the visible energy distributions.Comment: 58 pages, 24 figure
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