42 research outputs found

    Direct Measurement of Nuclear Dependence of Charged Current Quasielastic-like Neutrino Interactions using MINERvA

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    Charged-current νμ\nu_{\mu} interactions on carbon, iron, and lead with a final state hadronic system of one or more protons with zero mesons are used to investigate the influence of the nuclear environment on quasielastic-like interactions. The transfered four-momentum squared to the target nucleus, Q2Q^2, is reconstructed based on the kinematics of the leading proton, and differential cross sections versus Q2Q^2 and the cross-section ratios of iron, lead and carbon to scintillator are measured for the first time in a single experiment. The measurements show a dependence on atomic number. While the quasielastic-like scattering on carbon is compatible with predictions, the trends exhibited by scattering on iron and lead favor a prediction with intranuclear rescattering of hadrons accounted for by a conventional particle cascade treatment. These measurements help discriminate between different models of both initial state nucleons and final state interactions used in the neutrino oscillation experiments

    Search for multimessenger signals in NOvA coincident with LIGO/Virgo detections

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    Using the NOvA neutrino detectors, a broad search has been performed for any signal coincident with 28 gravitational wave events detected by the LIGO/Virgo Collaboration between September 2015 and July 2019. For all of these events, NOvA is sensitive to possible arrival of neutrinos and cosmic rays of GeV and higher energies. For five (seven) events in the NOvA Far (Near) Detector, timely public alerts from the LIGO/Virgo Collaboration allowed recording of MeV-scale events. No signal candidates were found

    Supernova neutrino detection in NOvA

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    The NOvA long-baseline neutrino experiment uses a pair of large, segmented, liquid-scintillator calorimeters to study neutrino oscillations, using GeV-scale neutrinos from the Fermilab NuMI beam. These detectors are also sensitive to the flux of neutrinos which are emitted during a core-collapse supernova through inverse beta decay interactions on carbon at energies of O(10 MeV). This signature provides a means to study the dominant mode of energy release for a core-collapse supernova occurring in our galaxy. We describe the data-driven software trigger system developed and employed by the NOvA experiment to identify and record neutrino data from nearby galactic supernovae. This technique has been used by NOvA to self-trigger on potential core-collapse supernovae in our galaxy, with an estimated sensitivity reaching out to 10 kpc distance while achieving a detection efficiency of 23% to 49% for supernovae from progenitor stars with masses of 9.6 M_⊙ to 27 M_⊙, respectively

    Seasonal Variation of Multiple-Muon Cosmic Ray Air Showers Observed in the NOvA Detector on the Surface

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    We report the rate of cosmic ray air showers with multiplicities exceeding 15 muon tracks recorded in the NOvA Far Detector between May 2016 and May 2018. The detector is located on the surface under an overburden of 3.6 meters water equivalent. We observe a seasonal dependence in the rate of multiple-muon showers, which varies in magnitude with multiplicity and zenith angle. During this period, the effective atmospheric temperature and surface pressure ranged between 210 K to 230 K and 940mbar to 990mbar, respectively; the shower rates are anti-correlated with the variation in the effective temperature. The variations are about 30% larger for the highest multiplicities than the lowest multiplicities and 20% larger for showers near the horizon than vertical showers

    Extended search for supernova-like neutrinos in NOvA coincident with LIGO/Virgo detections

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    A search is performed for supernova-like neutrino interactions coincident with 76 gravitational wave events detected by the LIGO/Virgo Collaboration. For 40 of these events, full readout of the time around the gravitational wave is available from the NOvA Far Detector. For these events, we set limits on the fluence of the sum of all neutrino flavors of F<7(4)×1010cm2F < 7(4)\times 10^{10}\mathrm{cm}^{-2} at 90% C.L. assuming energy and time distributions corresponding to the Garching supernova models with masses 9.6(27)M\mathrm{M}_\odot. Under the hypothesis that any given gravitational wave event was caused by a supernova, this corresponds to a distance of r>29(50)r > 29(50)kpc at 90% C.L. Weaker limits are set for other gravitational wave events with partial Far Detector data and/or Near Detector data.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figure

    An Improved Measurement of Neutrino Oscillation Parameters by the NOvA Experiment

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    We present new νμνe\nu_\mu\rightarrow\nu_e, νμνμ\nu_\mu\rightarrow\nu_\mu, νμνe\overline{\nu}_\mu\rightarrow\overline{\nu}_e, and νμνμ\overline{\nu}_\mu\rightarrow\overline{\nu}_\mu oscillation measurements by the NOvA experiment, with a 50% increase in neutrino-mode beam exposure over the previously reported results. The additional data, combined with previously published neutrino and antineutrino data, are all analyzed using improved techniques and simulations. A joint fit to the νe\nu_e, νμ\nu_\mu, νe\overline{\nu}_e, and νμ\overline{\nu}_\mu candidate samples within the 3-flavor neutrino oscillation framework continues to yield a best-fit point in the normal mass ordering and the upper octant of the θ23\theta_{23} mixing angle, with Δm322=(2.41±0.07)×103\Delta m^{2}_{32} = (2.41\pm0.07)\times 10^{-3} eV2^2 and sin2θ23=0.570.04+0.03\sin^2\theta_{23} = 0.57^{+0.03}_{-0.04}. The data disfavor combinations of oscillation parameters that give rise to a large asymmetry in the rates of νe\nu_e and νe\overline{\nu}_e appearance. This includes values of the CP-violating phase in the vicinity of δCP=π/2\delta_\text{CP} = \pi/2 which are excluded by >3σ>3\sigma for the inverted mass ordering, and values around δCP=3π/2\delta_\text{CP} = 3\pi/2 in the normal ordering which are disfavored at 2σ\sigma confidence.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures. Supplementary material attached (7 figures

    Neutrino flux predictions for the NuMI beam

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    Knowledge of the neutrino flux produced by the Neutrinos at the Main Injector (NuMI) beamline is essential to the neutrino oscillation and neutrino interaction measurements of the MINERvA, MINOS+, NOvA and MicroBooNE experiments at Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory. We have produced a flux prediction which uses all available and relevant hadron production data, incorporating measurements of particle production off of thin targets as well as measurements of particle yields from a spare NuMI target exposed to a 120 GeV proton beam. The result is the most precise flux prediction achieved for a neutrino beam in the one to tens of GeV energy region. We have also compared the prediction to in situ measurements of the neutrino flux and find good agreement
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