85 research outputs found
ICANOE - Imaging and Calorimetric Neutrino Oscillation Experiment
The main scientific goal of the ICANOE detector is the one of elucidating in
a comprehensive way the pattern of neutrino masses and mixings, following the
SuperKamiokande results and the observed solar neutrinos deficit. To achieve
these goals, the experimental method is based upon the complementary and
simultaneous detection of CERN beam (CNGS) and cosmic ray (CR) events. For the
currently allowed values of the SuperKamiokande results, both CNGS and cosmic
ray data will give independent measurements and provide a precise determination
of the oscillation parameters.Comment: Talk given at the Workshop on the Next generation Nucleon decay and
Neutrino detector (NNN99), September 23-25, 199
A low energy optimization of the CERN-NGS neutrino beam for a theta_{13} driven neutrino oscillation search
The possibility to improve the CERN to Gran Sasso neutrino beam performances
for theta_{13} searches is investigated. We show that by an appropriate
optimization of the target and focusing optics of the present CNGS design, we
can increase the flux of low energy neutrinos by about a factor 5 compared to
the current tau optimized focalisation. With the ICARUS 2.35 kton detector at
LNGS and in case of negative result, this would allow to improve the limit to
sin^22 theta_{13} by an order of magnitude better than the current limit of
CHOOZ at Delta m^2 approximately 3 times 10^{-3} eV^2 within 5 years of nominal
CNGS running. This is by far the most sensitive setup of the currently approved
long-baseline experiments and is competitive with the proposed JHF superbeam.Comment: 19 pages, 8 figure
ICARUS at the Fermilab Short-Baseline Neutrino Program -- Initial Operation
The ICARUS collaboration employed the 760-ton T600 detector in a successful three-year physics run at the underground LNGS laboratory studying neutrino oscillations with the CERN Neutrino to Gran Sasso beam (CNGS) and searching for atmospheric neutrino interactions. ICARUS performed a sensitive search for LSND-like anomalous appearance in the CNGS beam, which contributed to the constraints on the allowed parameters to a narrow region around 1 eV, where all the experimental results can be coherently accommodated at 90% C.L.. After a significant overhaul at CERN, the T600 detector has been installed at Fermilab. In 2020, cryogenic commissioning began with detector cool down, liquid argon filling and recirculation. ICARUS has started operations and successfully completed its commissioning phase, collecting the first neutrino events from the Booster Neutrino Beam (BNB) and the Neutrinos at the Main Injector (NuMI) beam off-axis, which were used to test the ICARUS event selection, reconstruction and analysis algorithms. The first goal of the ICARUS data taking will then be a study to either confirm or refute the claim by Neutrino-4 short baseline reactor experiment both in the channel with the BNB and in the with NuMI. ICARUS will also address other fundamental studies such as neutrino cross sections with the NuMI beam and a number of Beyond Standard Model searches. After the first year of operations, ICARUS will commence its search for evidence of a sterile neutrino jointly with the Short Baseline Near Detector, within the Short-Baseline Neutrino program
Statistical Pattern Recognition: Application to Oscillation Searches Based on Kinematic Criteria
Classic statistical techniques (like the multi-dimensional likelihood and the
Fisher discriminant method) together with Multi-layer Perceptron and Learning
Vector Quantization Neural Networks have been systematically used in order to
find the best sensitivity when searching for
oscillations. We discovered that for a general direct appearance
search based on kinematic criteria: a) An optimal discrimination power is
obtained using only three variables (, and
) and their correlations. Increasing the number of variables (or
combinations of variables) only increases the complexity of the problem, but
does not result in a sensible change of the expected sensitivity. b) The
multi-layer perceptron approach offers the best performance. As an example to
assert numerically those points, we have considered the problem of
appearance at the CNGS beam using a Liquid Argon TPC detector.Comment: 24 pages, 15 figure
Proton driver optimization for new generation neutrino superbeams to search for sub-leading numu->nue oscillations ( angle)
We perform a systematic study of particle production and neutrino yields for
different incident proton energies and baselines , with the aim of
optimizing the parameters of a neutrino beam for the investigation of
-driven neutrino oscillations in the range allowed by
Superkamiokande results. We study the neutrino energy spectra in the
``relevant'' region of the first maximum of the oscillation at a given baseline
. We find that to each baseline corresponds an ``optimal'' proton energy
which minimizes the required integrated proton intensity needed to
observe a fixed number of oscillated events. In addition, we find that the
neutrino event rate in the relevant region scales approximately linearly with
the proton energy. Hence, baselines and proton energies can be
adjusted and the performance for neutrino oscillation searches will remain
approximately unchanged provided that the product of the proton energy times
the number of protons on target remains constant. We apply these ideas to the
specific cases of 2.2, 4.4, 20, 50 and 400 GeV protons. We simulate focusing
systems that are designed to best capture the secondary pions of the
``optimal'' energy. We compute the expected sensitivities to
for the various configurations by assuming the existence
of new generation accelerators able to deliver integrated proton intensities on
target times the proton energy of the order of ${\cal O}(5\times 10^{23})\rm\
GeV\times\rm pot/year$.Comment: 39 pages, 17 figure
From parameter space constraints to the precision determination of the leptonic Dirac CP phase
We discuss the precision determination of the leptonic Dirac CP phase
in neutrino oscillation experiments, where we apply the concept
of ``CP coverage''. We demonstrate that this approach carries more information
than a conventional CP violation measurement, since it also describes the
exclusion of parameter regions. This will be very useful for next-generation
long baseline experiments where for sizable first
constraints on can be obtained. As the most sophisticated
experimental setup, we analyze neutrino factories, where we illustrate the
major difficulties in their analysis. In addition, we compare their potential
to the one of superbeam upgrades and next-generation experiments, which also
includes a discussion of synergy effects. We find a strong dependence on the
yet unknown true values of and , as well as
a strong, non-Gaussian dependence on the confidence level. A systematic
understanding of the complicated parameter dependence will be given. In
addition, it is shown that comparisons of experiments and synergy discussions
do in general not allow for an unbiased judgment if they are only performed at
selected points in parameter space. Therefore, we present our results in
dependence of the yet unknown true values of and
. Finally we show that for precision measurements
there exist simple strategies including superbeams, reactor experiments,
superbeam upgrades, and neutrino factories, where the crucial discriminator is
.Comment: 32 pages, 9 figure
Reconstructing the two right-handed neutrino model
In this paper we propose a low-energy parametrization of the two right-handed
neutrino model, and discuss the prospects to determine experimentally these
parameters in supersymmetric scenarios. In addition, we present exact formulas
to reconstruct the high-energy leptonic superpotential in terms of the
low-energy observables. We also discuss limits of the three right-handed
neutrino model where this procedure applies.Comment: 28 pages, 4 figures. Typos corrected, references adde
First operation of a liquid Argon TPC embedded in a magnetic field
We have operated for the first time a liquid Argon TPC immersed in a magnetic
field up to 0.55 T. We show that the imaging properties of the detector are not
affected by the presence of the magnetic field. The magnetic bending of the
ionizing particle allows to discriminate their charge and estimate their
momentum. These figures were up to now not accessible in the non-magnetized
liquid Argon TPC.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure
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