23 research outputs found
Evidence of antineutrinos from distant reactors using pure water at SNO
The SNO+ Collaboration reports the first evidence of reactor antineutrinos in a Cherenkov detector. The nearest nuclear reactors are located 240 km away in Ontario, Canada. This analysis uses events with energies lower than in any previous analysis with a large water Cherenkov detector. Two analytical methods are used to distinguish reactor antineutrinos from background events in 190 days of data and yield consistent evidence for antineutrinos with a combined significance of 3.5σ
Improved search for invisible modes of nucleon decay in water with the SNO+ detector
This paper reports results from a search for single and multi-nucleon
disappearance from the O nucleus in water within the \snoplus{} detector
using all of the available data. These so-called "invisible" decays do not
directly deposit energy within the detector but are instead detected through
their subsequent nuclear de-excitation and gamma-ray emission. New limits are
given for the partial lifetimes:
years, years, years,
years, and years at 90\% Bayesian
credibility level (with a prior uniform in rate). All but the () results improve on existing limits by a factor of about 3.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Observation of Antineutrinos from Distant Reactors using Pure Water at SNO+
The SNO+ collaboration reports the first observation of reactor antineutrinos
in a Cherenkov detector. The nearest nuclear reactors are located 240 km away
in Ontario, Canada. This analysis used events with energies lower than in any
previous analysis with a large water Cherenkov detector. Two analytical methods
were used to distinguish reactor antineutrinos from background events in 190
days of data and yielded consistent observations of antineutrinos with a
combined significance of 3.5 .Comment: v2: add missing author, add link to supplemental materia
Development, characterisation, and deployment of the SNO+ liquid scintillator
A liquid scintillator consisting of linear alkylbenzene as the solvent and 2,5-diphenyloxazole as the fluor was developed for the SNO+ experiment. This mixture was chosen as it is compatible with acrylic and has a competitive light yield to pre-existing liquid scintillators while conferring other advantages including longer attenuation lengths, superior safety characteristics, chemical simplicity, ease of handling, and logistical availability. Its properties have been extensively characterized and are presented here. This liquid scintillator is now used in several neutrino physics experiments in addition to SNO+
The SNO+ experiment
The SNO+ experiment is located 2 km underground at SNOLAB in Sudbury, Canada. A low background search for neutrinoless double beta (0νββ) decay will be conducted using 780 tonnes of liquid scintillator loaded with 3.9 tonnes of natural tellurium, corresponding to 1.3 tonnes of 130Te. This paper provides a general overview of the SNO+ experiment, including detector design, construction of process plants, commissioning efforts, electronics upgrades, data acquisition systems, and calibration techniques. The SNO+ collaboration is reusing the acrylic vessel, PMT array, and electronics of the SNO detector, having made a number of experimental upgrades and essential adaptations for use with the liquid scintillator. With low backgrounds and a low energy threshold, the SNO+ collaboration will also pursue a rich physics program beyond the search for 0νββ decay, including studies of geo- and reactor antineutrinos, supernova and solar neutrinos, and exotic physics such as the search for invisible nucleon decay. The SNO+ approach to the search for 0νββ decay is scalable: a future phase with high 130Te-loading is envisioned to probe an effective Majorana mass in the inverted mass ordering region