114 research outputs found
Solar Neutrino Results from the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory
We describe here the measurement of the flux of neutrinos created by the
decay of solar ^8B by the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory (SNO). The neutrinos
were detected via the charged current (CC) reaction on deuterium and by the
elastic scattering (ES) of electrons. The CC reaction is sensitive exclusively
to 's, while the ES reaction also has a small sensitivity to
's and 's.
The flux of 's from ^8B decay measured by the CC reaction rate is
. Assuming no flavor transformation, the flux
inferred from the ES reaction rate is .
Comparison of to the Super-Kamiokande Collaboration's
precision value of yields a difference, assuming
the systematic uncertainties are normally distributed, providing evidence that
there is a non-electron flavor active neutrino component in the solar flux. The
total flux of active ^8B neutrinos is thus determined to be , in close agreement with the predictions of solar
models.Comment: Talk given at the XX International Symposium on Lepton and Photon
Interactions at High Energie
Recent Results from the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory
The Sudbury Neutrino Observatory (SNO) measures both the flux of the
electron-type neutrinos and the total flux of all active flavours of neutrinos
originating from the Sun. A model-independent test of neutrino flavour
transformation was performed by comparing these two measurements. In 2002, this
flavour transformation was definitively demonstrated. In this talk, results
from these measurements and the current status of the SNO detector are
presented.Comment: Proceedings of the International Europhysics Conference on High
Energy Physics (EPS2003) 3 pages, 2 figures, 2 table
Relation between CKM and MNS Matrices Induced by Bi-Maximal Rotations in the Seesaw Mechanism
It is found that the seesaw mechanism not only explains the smallness of
neutrino masses but also accounts for the large mixing angles simultaneously,
even if the unification of the neutrino Dirac mass matrix with that of up-type
quark sector is realized. In this mechanism, we show that the mixing matrix of
the Dirac-type mass matrix gets extra rotations from the diagonalization of
Majorana mass matrix. Assuming that the mixing angles to diagonalize the
Majorana mass matrix are extremely small, we find that the large mixing angles
of leptonic sector found in atmospheric and long baseline reactor neutrino
oscillation experiments can be explained by these extra rotations. We also find
that provided the mixing angle around y-axis to diagonalize the Majorana mass
matrix vanishes, we can derive the information about the absolute values of
neutrino masses and Majorana mass responsible for the neutrinoless double beta
decay experiment through the data set of neutrino experiments. In the
simplified case that there is no CP phase, we find that the neutrino masses are
decided as and that there are no solution which
satisfy (inverted mass spectrum). Then, including all CP phases,
we reanalyze the absolute values of neutrino masses and Majorana mass
responsible for the neutrinoless double beta decay experiment.Comment: 19 pages, 7 figures, revtex4, to appear in J.PHYS.SOC.JA
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
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Results from the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory Phase III
The third and last phase of the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory (SNO) used a technique independent of previous methods, to measure the rate of neutral-current interactions in heavy water and determine precisely the total active {sup 8}B solar neutrino flux. The total flux obtained is 5.54{sub -0.31}{sup +0.33}(stat){sub -0.34}{sup +0.36}(syst) x 10{sup 6} cm{sup -2}s{sup -1}, in agreement with previous measurements and standard solar models. Results from a global analysis of solar and reactor neutrino give {Delta}m{sup 2} = 7.59{sub -0.21}{sup +0.19} x 10{sup -5} eV{sup 2} and {theta} = 34.4{sub -1.2}{sup +1.3} degrees with a reduced uncertainty on the mixing angle compared to previous phases
The effect of massive neutrinos on the matter power spectrum
We investigate the impact of massive neutrinos on the distribution of matter
in the semi-non-linear regime (0.1<k<0.6 h/Mpc). We present a suite of
large-scale N-body simulations quantifying the scale dependent suppression of
the total matter power spectrum, resulting from the free-streaming of massive
neutrinos out of high-density regions. Our simulations show a power suppression
of 3.5-90 per cent at k~0.6 h/Mpc for total neutrino mass, m_nu=0.05-1.9 eV
respectively. We also discuss the precision levels that future cosmological
datasets would have to achieve in order to distinguish the normal and inverted
neutrino mass hierarchies.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures, 1 table, changes made to address referee repor
Neutron detection in the SNO+ water phase
SNO+ is a multipurpose neutrino experiment located approximately 2 km underground in SNOLAB, Sudbury, Canada. The detector started taking physics data in May 2017 and is currently completing its first phase, as a pure water Cherenkov detector. The low trigger threshold of the SNO+ detector allows for a substantial neutron detection efficiency, as observed with a deployed ^{241}Am^{9}Be source. Using a statistical analysis of one hour AmBe calibration data, we report a neutron capture constant of 208.2 + 2.1(stat.) us and a lower bound of the neutron detection efficiency of 46% at the center of the detector.Peer Reviewe
The HLMA project: determination of high delta-m^2 LMA mixing parameters and constraint on |U_e3| with a new reactor neutrino experiment
In the forthcoming months, the KamLAND experiment will probe the parameter
space of the solar large mixing angle (LMA) MSW solution as the origin of the
solar neutrino deficit with \nuebar's from distant nuclear reactors. If
however the solution realized in nature is such that \Dm2_{sol} \gsim 2 \cdot
10^{-4} eV (thereafter named the HLMA region), KamLAND will only observe a
rate suppression but no spectral distortion and hence it will not have the
optimal sensitivity to measure the mixing parameters. In this case, we propose
a new medium baseline reactor experiment located at Heilbronn (Germany) to pin
down the precise value of the solar mixing parameters. In this paper, we
present the Heilbronn detector site, we calculate the \nuebar interaction
rate and the positron spectrum expected from the surrounding nuclear power
plants. We also discuss the sensitivity of such an experiment to |U_e3| in both
normal and inverted neutrino mass hierarchy scenarios. We then outline the
detector design, estimate background signals induced by natural radioactivity
as well as by in-situ cosmic ray muon interaction, and discuss a strategy to
detect the anti-neutrino signal 'free of background'.Comment: 22 pages, 5 figures; v2: added references, caption of Fig.4 and typos
corrected; v3: accepted for publication in Astroparticle Physics, references
added, typo in Sec. 6.3 correcte
Fake CPT Violation in Disappearance Neutrino Oscillations
We make an analysis of the fake CPT-violating asymmetries between the
survival probabilities of neutrinos and antineutrinos, induced by the
terrestrial matter effects, in three different scenarios of long-baseline
neutrino oscillation experiments with L=730 km, L=2100 km and L=3200 km. In
particular, the dependence of those asymmetries on the Dirac-type CP-violating
phase of the lepton flavor mixing matrix is examined.Comment: RevTex 8 pages (including 3 PS figures). To be publishe
Hybrid Textures of Neutrinos
We present numerical and comprehensive analyses of the sixty hybrid textures
of neutrinos, which have an equality of matrix elements and one zero. These
textures are possibly derived from the discrete symmetry. Only six textures
among sixty ones are excluded by the present experimental data. Since there are
many textures which give similar predictions, the textures are classified based
on the numerical results. The neutrinoless double beta decay is also examined
in these textures. Our results suggest that there remain still rich structures
of the neutrino mass matrix in the phenomenological point of view.Comment: 19 pages, 9 figures; analytical discussions added, table and
reference adde
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