275 research outputs found

    Beam Test of a Segmented Foil SEM Grid

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    A prototype Secondary-electron Emission Monitor (SEM) was installed in the 8 GeV proton transport line for the MiniBooNE experiment at Fermilab. The SEM is a segmented grid made with 5 um Ti foils, intended for use in the 120 GeV NuMI beam at Fermilab. Similar to previous workers, we found that the full collection of the secondary electron signal requires a bias voltage to draw the ejected electrons cleanly off the foils, and this effect is more pronounced at larger beam intensity. The beam centroid and width resolutions of the SEM were measured at beam widths of 3, 7, and 8 mm, and compared to calculations. Extrapolating the data from this beam test, we expect a centroid and width resolutions of 20um and 25 um, respectively, in the NuMI beam which has 1 mm spot size.Comment: submitted to Nucl. Instr. Meth.

    A Letter of Intent to Build a MiniBooNE Near Detector: BooNE

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    There is accumulating evidence for a difference between neutrino and antineutrino oscillations at the 1\sim 1 eV2^2 scale. The MiniBooNE experiment observes an unexplained excess of electron-like events at low energies in neutrino mode, which may be due, for example, to either a neutral current radiative interaction, sterile neutrino decay, or to neutrino oscillations involving sterile neutrinos and which may be related to the LSND signal. No excess of electron-like events (0.5±7.8±8.7-0.5 \pm 7.8 \pm 8.7), however, is observed so far at low energies in antineutrino mode. Furthermore, global 3+1 and 3+2 sterile neutrino fits to the world neutrino and antineutrino data suggest a difference between neutrinos and antineutrinos with significant (sin22θμμ35\sin^22\theta_{\mu \mu} \sim 35%) νˉμ\bar \nu_\mu disappearance. In order to test whether the low-energy excess is due to neutrino oscillations and whether there is a difference between νμ\nu_\mu and νˉμ\bar \nu_\mu disappearance, we propose building a second MiniBooNE detector at (or moving the existing MiniBooNE detector to) a distance of 200\sim 200 m from the Booster Neutrino Beam (BNB) production target. With identical detectors at different distances, most of the systematic errors will cancel when taking a ratio of events in the two detectors, as the neutrino flux varies as 1/r21/r^2 to a calculable approximation. This will allow sensitive tests of oscillations for both νe\nu_e and νˉe\bar \nu_e appearance and νμ\nu_\mu and νˉμ\bar \nu_\mu disappearance. Furthermore, a comparison between oscillations in neutrino mode and antineutrino mode will allow a sensitive search for CP and CPT violation in the lepton sector at short baseline (Δm2>0.1\Delta m^2 > 0.1 eV2^2).Comment: 43 pages, 40 figure

    First Measurement of Monoenergetic Muon Neutrino Charged Current Interactions

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    We report the first measurement of monoenergetic muon neutrino charged current interactions. MiniBooNE has isolated 236 MeV muon neutrino events originating from charged kaon decay at rest (K+μ+νμK^+ \rightarrow \mu^+ \nu_\mu) at the NuMI beamline absorber. These signal νμ\nu_\mu-carbon events are distinguished from primarily pion decay in flight νμ\nu_\mu and νμ\overline{\nu}_\mu backgrounds produced at the target station and decay pipe using their arrival time and reconstructed muon energy. The significance of the signal observation is at the 3.9σ\sigma level. The muon kinetic energy, neutrino-nucleus energy transfer (ω=EνEμ\omega=E_\nu-E_\mu), and total cross section for these events is extracted. This result is the first known-energy, weak-interaction-only probe of the nucleus to yield a measurement of ω\omega using neutrinos, a quantity thus far only accessible through electron scattering.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
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