41 research outputs found
Solar neutrino measurements using the full data period of Super-Kamiokande-IV
An analysis of solar neutrino data from the fourth phase of
Super-Kamiokande~(SK-IV) from October 2008 to May 2018 is performed and the
results are presented. The observation time of the data set of SK-IV
corresponds to ~days and the total live time for all four phases is
~days. For more precise solar neutrino measurements, several improvements
are applied in this analysis: lowering the data acquisition threshold in May
2015, further reduction of the spallation background using neutron clustering
events, precise energy reconstruction considering the time variation of the PMT
gain. The observed number of solar neutrino events in -- MeV
electron kinetic energy region during SK-IV is
events.
Corresponding solar neutrino flux is , assuming a pure electron-neutrino flavor
component without neutrino oscillations. The flux combined with all SK phases
up to SK-IV is . Based on the neutrino oscillation
analysis from all solar experiments, including the SK ~days data set, the
best-fit neutrino oscillation parameters are and , with a deviation of about
1.5 from the parameter obtained by KamLAND. The
best-fit neutrino oscillation parameters obtained from all solar experiments
and KamLAND are and
.Comment: 47 pages, 61 figure
Hyper-Kamiokande Design Report
325 pages325 pagesOn the strength of a double Nobel prize winning experiment (Super)Kamiokande and an extremely successful long baseline neutrino programme, the third generation Water Cherenkov detector, Hyper-Kamiokande, is being developed by an international collaboration as a leading worldwide experiment based in Japan. The Hyper-Kamiokande detector will be hosted in the Tochibora mine, about 295 km away from the J-PARC proton accelerator research complex in Tokai, Japan. The currently existing accelerator will be steadily upgraded to reach a MW beam by the start of the experiment. A suite of near detectors will be vital to constrain the beam for neutrino oscillation measurements. A new cavern will be excavated at the Tochibora mine to host the detector. The experiment will be the largest underground water Cherenkov detector in the world and will be instrumented with new technology photosensors, faster and with higher quantum efficiency than the ones in Super-Kamiokande. The science that will be developed will be able to shape the future theoretical framework and generations of experiments. Hyper-Kamiokande will be able to measure with the highest precision the leptonic CP violation that could explain the baryon asymmetry in the Universe. The experiment also has a demonstrated excellent capability to search for proton decay, providing a significant improvement in discovery sensitivity over current searches for the proton lifetime. The atmospheric neutrinos will allow to determine the neutrino mass ordering and, together with the beam, able to precisely test the three-flavour neutrino oscillation paradigm and search for new phenomena. A strong astrophysical programme will be carried out at the experiment that will detect supernova neutrinos and will measure precisely solar neutrino oscillation
Physics Potentials with the Second Hyper-Kamiokande Detector in Korea
We have conducted sensitivity studies on an alternative configuration of the Hyper-Kamiokande experiment by locating the 2nd Hyper-Kamiokande detector in Korea at 11001300 km baseline. Having two detectors at different baselines improves sensitivity to leptonic CP violation, neutrino mass ordering as well as nonstandard neutrino interactions. There are several candidate sites in Korea with greater than 1 km high mountains ranged at an 13 degree off-axis angle. Thanks to larger overburden of the candidate sites in Korea, low energy physics, such as solar and supernova neutrino physics as well as dark matter search, is expected to be improved. In this paper sensitivity studies on the CP violation phase and neutrino mass ordering are performed using current T2K systematic uncertainties in most cases. We plan to improve our sensitivity studies in the near future with better estimation of our systematic uncertainties
Search for an Excess of Events in the Super-Kamiokande Detector in the Directions of the Astrophysical Neutrinos Reported by the IceCube Collaboration
We present the results of a search in the Super-Kamiokande (SK) detector for excesses of neutrinos with energies
above a few GeV that are in the direction of the track events reported in IceCube. Data from all SK phases (SK-I
through SK-IV) were used, spanning a period from 1996 April to 2016 April and corresponding to an exposure of
225 kiloton-years. We considered the 14 IceCube track events from a data set with 1347 livetime days taken from
2010 to 2014. We use Poisson counting to determine if there is an excess of neutrinos detected in SK in a 10°
search cone (5° for the highest energy data set) around the reconstructed direction of the IceCube event. No
significant excess was found in any of the search directions we examined. We also looked for coincidences with a
recently reported IceCube multiplet event. No events were detected within a ±500 s time window around the first
detected event, and no significant excess was seen from that direction over the lifetime of SK
Search for nucleon decay into charged antilepton plus meson in 0.316 megaton . years exposure of the Super-Kamiokande water Cherenkov detector
We have searched for proton decays into a charged antilepton (e+, μ+) plus a meson (η, ρ0, ω) and for neutron decays into a charged antilepton (e+, μ+) plus a meson (π−, ρ−) using Super-Kamiokande I-IV data, corresponding to 0.316 megaton⋅years of exposure. This measurement updates the previous published result by using 2.26 times more data and improved analysis methods. No significant evidence for nucleon decay is observed and lower limits on the partial lifetime of the nucleon are obtained. The limits range from 3×1031 to 1×1034 years at 90% confidence level, depending on the decay mode
Search for Neutrinos in Super-Kamiokande Associated with the GW170817 Neutron-star Merger
We report the results of a neutrino search in Super-Kamiokande (SK) for coincident signals with the first detected gravitational wave (GW) produced by a binary neutron-star merger, GW170817, which was followed by a short gamma-ray burst, GRB170817A, and a kilonova/macronova. We searched for coincident neutrino events in the range from 3.5 MeV to ~100 PeV, in a time window ±500 s around the gravitational wave detection time, as well as during a 14-day period after the detection. No significant neutrino signal was observed for either time window. We calculated 90% confidence level upper limits on the neutrino fluence for GW170817. From the upward-going-muon events in the energy region above 1.6 GeV, the neutrino fluence limit is () cm−2 for muon neutrinos (muon antineutrinos), with an error range of ±5° around the zenith angle of NGC4993, and the energy spectrum is under the assumption of an index of −2. The fluence limit for neutrino energies less than 100 MeV, for which the emission mechanism would be different than for higher-energy neutrinos, is also calculated. It is 6.6 × 107 cm−2 for anti-electron neutrinos under the assumption of a Fermi–Dirac spectrum with average energy of 20 MeV
Search for Boosted Dark Matter Interacting with Electrons in Super-Kamiokande
A search for boosted dark matter using 161.9 kt yr of Super-Kamiokande IV data is presented. We search
for an excess of elastically scattered electrons above the atmospheric neutrino background, with a visible
energy between 100 MeV and 1 TeV, pointing back to the Galactic center or the Sun. No such excess is
observed. Limits on boosted dark matter event rates in multiple angular cones around the Galactic center
and Sun are calculated. Limits are also calculated for a baseline model of boosted dark matter produced
from cold dark matter annihilation or decay. This is the first experimental search for boosted dark matter
from the Galactic center or the Sun interacting in a terrestrial detector
Measurement of the tau neutrino cross section in atmospheric neutrino oscillations with Super-Kamiokande
Using 5326 days of atmospheric neutrino data, a search for atmospheric tau neutrino appearance has
been performed in the Super-Kamiokande experiment. Super-Kamiokande measures the tau normalization
to be 1.47 ± 0.32 under the assumption of normal neutrino hierarchy, relative to the expectation of unity
with neutrino oscillation. The result excludes the hypothesis of no-tau appearance with a significance level
of 4.6σ. The inclusive charged-current tau neutrino cross section averaged by the tau neutrino flux at SuperKamiokande
is measured to be ð0.94 ± 0.20Þ × 10−38 cm2. The measurement is consistent with the
Standard Model prediction, agreeing to within 1.5σ
Atmospheric neutrino oscillation analysis with external constraints in Super-Kamiokande I-IV
An analysis of atmospheric neutrino data from all four run periods of Super-Kamiokande optimized for
sensitivity to the neutrino mass hierarchy is presented. Confidence intervals for Δm2
32, sin2 θ23, sin2 θ13 and
δCP are presented for normal neutrino mass hierarchy and inverted neutrino mass hierarchy hypotheses,
based on atmospheric neutrino data alone. Additional constraints from reactor data on θ13 and from
published binned T2K data on muon neutrino disappearance and electron neutrino appearance are added to
the atmospheric neutrino fit to give enhanced constraints on the above parameters. Over the range of
parameters allowed at 90% confidence level, the normal mass hierarchy is favored by between 91.9% and
94.5% based on the combined Super-Kamiokande plus T2K result