1,166 research outputs found
Searching for Majorana Neutrinos at a Same-Sign Muon Collider
Majorana properties of neutrinos have long been a focus in the pursuit of
possible new physics beyond the standard model, which has motivated lots of
dedicated theoretical and experimental studies. A future same-sign muon
collider is an ideal platform to search for Majorana neutrinos through the
Lepton Number Violation process. Specifically, this t-channel kind of process
is less kinematically suppressed and has a good advantage in probing Majorana
neutrinos at high mass regions up to 10 TeV. In this paper, we perform a
detailed fast Monte Carlo simulation study through examining three different
final states: 1) pure-leptonic state with electrons or muons, 2) semi-leptonic
state, and 3) pure-hadronic state in the resolved or merged categories.
Furthermore, we perform a full simulation study on the pure-leptonic final
state to validate our fast simulation results.Comment: 15 pages, 8 figure
A Comparative Study of Z mediated Charged Lepton Flavor Violation at future lepton colliders
Charged lepton flavor violation (CLFV) represents a transition between
charged leptons of different generations that violates lepton flavor
conservation, which is a clear signature of possible new physics beyond the
standard model. By exploiting a typical example model of extra Z
gauge boson, we perform a detailed comparative study on CLFV searches at
several future lepton colliders, including a 240 GeV electron-positron collider
and a TeV scale muon collider. Based on detailed signal and background
Monte-Carlo studies with fast detector simulations, we derive the potentials in
searching for Z mediated CLFV couplings with , and
of different future colliders. The results are compared with the
current limits set by either low-energy experiments or the high-energy LHC
experiments. We find that the sensitivity of the related CLFV coupling
strength at future lepton colliders will be significantly improved comparing
with the current best constraints.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figure
The physics case for a neutrino lepton collider in light of the CDF W mass measurement
We propose a neutrino lepton collider where the neutrino beam is generated
from TeV scale muon decays. Such a device would allow for a precise measurement
of the W mass based on single W production: nu l to W. Although it is
challenging to achieve high instantaneous luminosity with such a collider, we
find that a total luminosity of 0.1/fb can already yield competitive physics
results. In addition to a W mass measurement, a rich variety of physics goals
could be achieved with such a collider, including W boson precision
measurements, heavy leptophilic gauge boson searches, and anomalous Znunu
coupling searches. A neutrino lepton collider is both a novel idea in itself,
and may also be a useful intermediate step, with less muon cooling required,
towards the muon-muon collider already being pursued by the energy frontier
community. A neutrino neutrino or neutrino proton collider may also be
interesting future options for the high energy frontier.Comment: 4 pages, 5 plots, accepted version by IJMP
Neutrino Physics with JUNO
The Jiangmen Underground Neutrino Observatory (JUNO), a 20 kton multi-purposeunderground liquid scintillator detector, was proposed with the determinationof the neutrino mass hierarchy as a primary physics goal. It is also capable ofobserving neutrinos from terrestrial and extra-terrestrial sources, includingsupernova burst neutrinos, diffuse supernova neutrino background, geoneutrinos,atmospheric neutrinos, solar neutrinos, as well as exotic searches such asnucleon decays, dark matter, sterile neutrinos, etc. We present the physicsmotivations and the anticipated performance of the JUNO detector for variousproposed measurements. By detecting reactor antineutrinos from two power plantsat 53-km distance, JUNO will determine the neutrino mass hierarchy at a 3-4sigma significance with six years of running. The measurement of antineutrinospectrum will also lead to the precise determination of three out of the sixoscillation parameters to an accuracy of better than 1\%. Neutrino burst from atypical core-collapse supernova at 10 kpc would lead to ~5000inverse-beta-decay events and ~2000 all-flavor neutrino-proton elasticscattering events in JUNO. Detection of DSNB would provide valuable informationon the cosmic star-formation rate and the average core-collapsed neutrinoenergy spectrum. Geo-neutrinos can be detected in JUNO with a rate of ~400events per year, significantly improving the statistics of existing geoneutrinosamples. The JUNO detector is sensitive to several exotic searches, e.g. protondecay via the decay channel. The JUNO detector will providea unique facility to address many outstanding crucial questions in particle andastrophysics. It holds the great potential for further advancing our quest tounderstanding the fundamental properties of neutrinos, one of the buildingblocks of our Universe
Potential of Core-Collapse Supernova Neutrino Detection at JUNO
JUNO is an underground neutrino observatory under construction in Jiangmen, China. It uses 20kton liquid scintillator as target, which enables it to detect supernova burst neutrinos of a large statistics for the next galactic core-collapse supernova (CCSN) and also pre-supernova neutrinos from the nearby CCSN progenitors. All flavors of supernova burst neutrinos can be detected by JUNO via several interaction channels, including inverse beta decay, elastic scattering on electron and proton, interactions on C12 nuclei, etc. This retains the possibility for JUNO to reconstruct the energy spectra of supernova burst neutrinos of all flavors. The real time monitoring systems based on FPGA and DAQ are under development in JUNO, which allow prompt alert and trigger-less data acquisition of CCSN events. The alert performances of both monitoring systems have been thoroughly studied using simulations. Moreover, once a CCSN is tagged, the system can give fast characterizations, such as directionality and light curve
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