34 research outputs found
Scintillator ageing of the T2K near detectors from 2010 to 2021
The T2K experiment widely uses plastic scintillator as a target for neutrino interactions and an active medium for the measurement of charged particles produced in neutrino interactions at its near detector complex. Over 10 years of operation the measured light yield recorded by the scintillator based subsystems has been observed to degrade by 0.9–2.2% per year. Extrapolation of the degradation rate through to 2040 indicates the recorded light yield should remain above the lower threshold used by the current reconstruction algorithms for all subsystems. This will allow the near detectors to continue contributing to important physics measurements during the T2K-II and Hyper-Kamiokande eras. Additionally, work to disentangle the degradation of the plastic scintillator and wavelength shifting fibres shows that the reduction in light yield can be attributed to the ageing of the plastic scintillator. The long component of the attenuation length of the wavelength shifting fibres was observed to degrade by 1.3–5.4% per year, while the short component of the attenuation length did not show any conclusive degradation
BBN constraints on MeV-scale dark sectors. Part I. Sterile decays
We study constraints from Big Bang Nucleosynthesis on inert particles in a
dark sector which contribute to the Hubble rate and therefore change the
predictions of the primordial nuclear abundances. We pay special attention to
the case of MeV-scale particles decaying into dark radiation, which are neither
fully relativistic nor non-relativistic during all temperatures relevant to Big
Bang Nucleosynthesis. As an application we discuss the implications of our
general results for models of self-interacting dark matter with light
mediators.Comment: 25 pages, 9 figure