116 research outputs found
Study of Neutrino Oscillations in the OPERA Experiment
The OPERA experiment has been designed to perform the first detection of
neutrino oscillations in direct appearance mode in the
channel, through the detection of the tau lepton produced in charged current
interaction on an event by event basis. The detector is hybrid, being made of
an emulsion/lead target and of electronic detectors. It exploited the CNGS muon
neutrino beam from CERN to Gran Sasso, 730 km from the source. Runs with CNGS
neutrinos were successfully carried out from 2008 to 2012. We report on the
large data sample analysed so far and give our results on the search for
and oscillations.Comment: Prensented at the Lake Louise Winter 2013 Conference, Banff, Alberta,
Canada, 17-23 February 201
NESSiE: The Experimental Sterile Neutrino Search in Short-Base-Line at CERN
Several different experimental results are indicating the existence of
anomalies in the neutrino sector. Models beyond the standard model have been
developed to explain these results and involve one or more additional neutrinos
that do not weakly interact. A new experimental program is therefore needed to
study this potential new physics with a possibly new Short-Base-Line neutrino
beam at CERN. CERN is actually promoting the start up of a New Neutrino
Facility in the North Area site, which may host two complementary detectors,
one based on LAr technology and one corresponding to a muon spectrometer. The
system is doubled in two different sites. With regards to the latter option,
NESSiE, Neutrino Experiment with Spectrometers in Europe, had been proposed for
the search of sterile neutrinos studying Charged Current (CC) muon neutrino and
antineutrino ineractions. The detectors consists of two magnetic spectrometers
to be located in two sites:"Near" and "Far" from the proton target of the
CERN-SPS beam. Each spectrometer will be complemented by an ICARUS-like LAr
target in order to allow also Neutral Current (NC) and electron neutrino CC
interactions reconstruction.Comment: Prensented at the Lake Louise Winter 2013 Conference, Banff, Alberta,
Canada, 17-23 February 201
Search for \nu_\mu -> \nu_\tau oscillations in appearance mode in the OPERA experiment
The OPERA experiment in the underground Gran Sasso Laboratory (LNGS) has been
designed to perform the first detection of neutrino oscillations in direct
appearance mode in the muon neutrino to tau neutrino channel. The detector is
hybrid, being made of an emulsion/lead target and of electronic detectors. It
is placed in the CNGS neutrino beam 730 km away from the neutrino source. Runs
with CNGS neutrinos were successfully carried out in 2008, 2009, and 2010.
After a brief description of the beam and the experimental setup, we report on
event analysis of a sample of events corresponding to 1.89\times 10^{19} p.o.t.
in the CERN CNGS \nu_{\mu} beam that yielded the observation of a first
candidate \nu_{\tau} CC interaction. The topology and kinematics of this
candidate event are described in detail. The background sources are explained
and the significance of the candidate is assessed.Comment: Contribution to Les Rencontres de Physique de la Vall\'ee D'Aoste (La
Thuile, February 27-March 5 2011); 8 pages, 4 figure
Semantic Web based Container Monitoring System for the Transportation Industry
Abstract: Goods are transported around the world in containers. Monitoring containers is a complex task. In this presentation, we will present a Container Monitoring System based on Semantic Web technologies. This system is currently being developed by Ege University, Bimar Information Technology Services and Capsenta for ARKAS Holding, one of Turkey's leading logistics and transportation companies. Our presentation consists of 1) introducing the challenges of monitoring containers in the transportation industry, 2) how existing technologies and solutions do not satisfy the needs, 3) why Semantic Web technologies can address the needs, 4) how we are using Semantic Web technologies including architectural design decisions and finally 5) describe lessons learned
Demonstration of particle tracking with scintillating fibres read out by a SPAD array sensor and application as a neutrino active target
Scintillating fibre detectors combine sub-mm resolution particle tracking,
precise measurements of the particle stopping power and sub-ns time resolution.
Typically, fibres are read out with silicon photomultipliers (SiPM). Hence, if
fibres with a few hundred mm diameter are used, either they are grouped
together and coupled with a single SiPM, losing spatial resolution, or a very
large number of electronic channels is required. In this article we propose and
provide a first demonstration of a novel configuration which allows each
individual scintillating fibre to be read out regardless of the size of its
diameter, by imaging them with Single-Photon Avalanche Diode (SPAD) array
sensors. Differently from SiPMs, SPAD array sensors provide single-photon
detection with single-pixel spatial resolution. In addition, O(us) or faster
coincidence of detected photons allows to obtain noise-free images. Such a
concept can be particularly advantageous if adopted as a neutrino active
target, where scintillating fibres alternated along orthogonal directions can
provide isotropic, high-resolution tracking in a dense material and reconstruct
the kinematics of low-momentum protons (down to 150 MeV/c), crucial for an
accurate characterisation of the neutrino nucleus cross section. In this work
the tracking capabilities of a bundle of scintillating fibres coupled to
SwissSPAD2 is demonstrated. The impact of such detector configuration in
GeV-neutrino experiments is studied with simulations and reported. Finally,
future plans, including the development of a new SPAD array sensor optimised
for neutrino detection, are discussed
Development of proton beam irradiation system for the NA65/DsTau experiment
Tau neutrino is the least studied lepton of the Standard Model (SM). The
NA65/DsTau experiment targets to investigate , the parent particle of the
, using the nuclear emulsion-based detector and to decrease the
systematic uncertainty of flux prediction from over 50% to 10% for
future beam dump experiments. In the experiment, the emulsion detectors are
exposed to the CERN SPS 400 GeV proton beam. To provide optimal conditions for
the reconstruction of interactions, the protons are required to be uniformly
distributed over the detector's surface with an average density of
and the fluctuation of less than 10%. To address this
issue, we developed a new proton irradiation system called the target mover.
The new target mover provided irradiation with a proton density of
and the density fluctuation of % in the DsTau
2021 run.Comment: 9 pages, 16 figure
DsTau: Study of tau neutrino production with 400 GeV protons from the CERN-SPS
In the DsTau experiment at the CERN SPS, an independent and direct way to
measure tau neutrino production following high energy proton interactions was
proposed. As the main source of tau neutrinos is a decay of Ds mesons, produced
in proton-nucleus interactions, the project aims at measuring a differential
cross section of this reaction. The experimental method is based on a use of
high resolution emulsion detectors for effective registration of events with
short lived particle decays. Here we present the motivation of the study,
details of the experimental technique, and the first results of the analysis of
the data collected during test runs, which prove feasibility of the full scale
study of the process in future
First Direct Observation of Collider Neutrinos with FASER at the LHC
We report the first direct observation of neutrino interactions at a particle
collider experiment. Neutrino candidate events are identified in a 13.6 TeV
center-of-mass energy collision data set of 35.4 fb using the
active electronic components of the FASER detector at the Large Hadron
Collider. The candidates are required to have a track propagating through the
entire length of the FASER detector and be consistent with a muon neutrino
charged-current interaction. We infer neutrino interactions
with a significance of 16 standard deviations above the background-only
hypothesis. These events are consistent with the characteristics expected from
neutrino interactions in terms of secondary particle production and spatial
distribution, and they imply the observation of both neutrinos and
anti-neutrinos with an incident neutrino energy of significantly above 200 GeV.Comment: Submitted to PRL on March 24 202
First neutrino interaction candidates at the LHC
FASER at the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC) is designed to directly
detect collider neutrinos for the first time and study their cross sections at
TeV energies, where no such measurements currently exist. In 2018, a pilot
detector employing emulsion films was installed in the far-forward region of
ATLAS, 480 m from the interaction point, and collected 12.2 fb of
proton-proton collision data at a center-of-mass energy of 13 TeV. We describe
the analysis of this pilot run data and the observation of the first neutrino
interaction candidates at the LHC. This milestone paves the way for high-energy
neutrino measurements at current and future colliders.Comment: Auxiliary materials are available at
https://faser.web.cern.ch/fasernu-first-neutrino-interaction-candidate
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