4,099 research outputs found
Cross Section Measurements with Monoenergetic Muon Neutrinos
The monoenergetic 236 MeV muon neutrino from charged kaon decay-at-rest () can be used to produce a novel set of cross section
measurements. Applicable for short- and long-baseline accelerator-based
neutrino oscillation experiments, among others, such measurements would provide
a "standard candle" for the energy reconstruction and interaction kinematics
relevant for charged current neutrino events near this energy. This neutrino
can also be exercised as a unique known-energy, purely weak interacting probe
of the nucleus. A number of experiments are set to come online in the next few
years that will be able to collect and characterize thousands of these events.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures; accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. D.; typos
fixed and references update
A Sterile Neutrino Search with Kaon Decay-at-rest
Monoenergetic muon neutrinos (235.5 MeV) from positive kaon decay-at-rest are
considered as a source for an electron neutrino appearance search. In
combination with a liquid argon time projection chamber based detector, such a
source could provide discovery-level sensitivity to the neutrino oscillation
parameter space indicative of a sterile neutrino. Current and future intense >3
GeV kinetic energy proton facilities around the world can be employed for this
experimental concept.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figure
Coherent Neutrino Scattering in Dark Matter Detectors
Coherent elastic neutrino- and WIMP-nucleus interaction signatures are
expected to be quite similar. This paper discusses how a next generation
ton-scale dark matter detector could discover neutrino-nucleus coherent
scattering, a precisely-predicted Standard Model process. A high intensity
pion- and muon- decay-at-rest neutrino source recently proposed for oscillation
physics at underground laboratories would provide the neutrinos for these
measurements. In this paper, we calculate raw rates for various target
materials commonly used in dark matter detectors and show that discovery of
this interaction is possible with a 2 tonyear GEODM exposure in an
optimistic energy threshold and efficiency scenario. We also study the effects
of the neutrino source on WIMP sensitivity and discuss the modulated neutrino
signal as a sensitivity/consistency check between different dark matter
experiments at DUSEL. Furthermore, we consider the possibility of coherent
neutrino physics with a GEODM module placed within tens of meters of the
neutrino source.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
Sterile Neutrino Fits to Short Baseline Neutrino Oscillation Measurements
This paper reviews short baseline oscillation experiments as interpreted
within the context of one, two, and three sterile neutrino models associated
with additional neutrino mass states in the ~1 eV range. Appearance and
disappearance signals and limits are considered. We show that fitting short
baseline data sets to a (3+3) model, defined by three active and three sterile
neutrinos, results in an overall goodness of fit of 67%, and a compatibility of
90% among all data sets -- to be compared to the compatibility of 0.043% and
13% for a (3+1) and a (3+2) model, respectively. While the (3+3) fit yields the
highest quality overall, it still finds inconsistencies with the MiniBooNE
appearance data sets; in particular, the global fit fails to account for the
observed MiniBooNE low-energy excess. Given the overall improvement, we
recommend using the results of (3+2) and (3+3) fits, rather than (3+1) fits,
for future neutrino oscillation phenomenology. These results motivate the
pursuit of further short baseline experiments, such as those reviewed in this
paper.Comment: Submitted to Advances in High Energy Physics Special Issue on
Neutrino Physic
Testing Lorentz Symmetry with the Double Chooz Experiment
4 pages, 1 figure, presented at the Sixth Meeting on CPT and Lorentz Symmetry, Bloomington, Indiana, June 17-21, 20134 pages, 1 figure, presented at the Sixth Meeting on CPT and Lorentz Symmetry, Bloomington, Indiana, June 17-21, 2013The Double Chooz reactor-based oscillation experiment searches for an electron antineutrino disappearance signal to investigate the neutrino mass matrix mixing angle theta 13. Double Chooz's reported evidence for this disappearance is generally interpreted as mass-driven mixing through this parameter. However, the electron antineutrino candidates collected by the experiment can also be used to search for a signature of the violation of Lorentz invariance. We study the sidereal time dependence of the antineutrino signal rate and probe Lorentz violation within the Standard-Model Extension (SME) framework. We find that the data prefer the sidereal time independent solution, and a number of limits are applied to the relevant SME coefficients, including the first constraints on those associated with Lorentz violation in the e-tau mixing sector
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