6,148 research outputs found
The Nylon Scintillator Containment Vessels for the Borexino Solar Neutrino Experiment
Borexino is a solar neutrino experiment designed to observe the 0.86 MeV Be-7
neutrinos emitted in the pp cycle of the sun. Neutrinos will be detected by
their elastic scattering on electrons in 100 tons of liquid scintillator. The
neutrino event rate in the scintillator is expected to be low (~0.35 events per
day per ton), and the signals will be at energies below 1.5 MeV, where
background from natural radioactivity is prominent. Scintillation light
produced by the recoil electrons is observed by an array of 2240
photomultiplier tubes. Because of the intrinsic radioactive contaminants in
these PMTs, the liquid scintillator is shielded from them by a thick barrier of
buffer fluid. A spherical vessel made of thin nylon film contains the
scintillator, separating it from the surrounding buffer. The buffer region
itself is divided into two concentric shells by a second nylon vessel in order
to prevent inward diffusion of radon atoms. The radioactive background
requirements for Borexino are challenging to meet, especially for the
scintillator and these nylon vessels. Besides meeting requirements for low
radioactivity, the nylon vessels must also satisfy requirements for mechanical,
optical, and chemical properties. The present paper describes the research and
development, construction, and installation of the nylon vessels for the
Borexino experiment
Neutrino Physics: Open Theoretical Questions
We know that neutrino mass and mixing provide a window to physics beyond the
Standard Model. Now this window is open, at least partly. And the questions
are: what do we see, which kind of new physics, and how far "beyond"? I
summarize the present knowledge of neutrino mass and mixing, and then formulate
the main open questions. Following the bottom-up approach, properties of the
neutrino mass matrix are considered. Then different possible ways to uncover
the underlying physics are discussed. Some results along the line of: see-saw,
GUT and SUSY GUT are reviewed.Comment: 17 pages, latex, 12 figures. Talk given at the XXI International
Symposium on Lepton and Photon Interactions at High Energies, ``Lepton Photon
2003", August 11-16, 2003 - Fermilab, Batavia, IL US
The Kr2Det project: Search for mass-3 state contribution |U_{e3}|^2 to the electron neutrino using a one reactor - two detector oscillation experiment at Krasnoyarsk underground site
The main physical goal of the project is to search with reactor antineutrinos
for small mixing angle oscillations in the atmospheric mass parameter region
around {\Delta}m^{2}_{atm} ~ 2.5 10^{-3} eV^2 in order to find the element
U_{e3} of the neutrino mixing matrix or to set a new more stringent constraint
(U_{e3} is the contribution of mass-3 state to the electron neutrino flavor
state). To achieve this we propose a "one reactor - two detector" experiment:
two identical antineutrino spectrometers with 50 ton liquid scintillator
targets located at ~100 m and ~1000 m from the Krasnoyarsk underground reactor
(~600 mwe). In no-oscillation case ratio of measured positron spectra of the
\bar{{\nu}_e} + p \to e^{+} + n reaction is energy independent. Deviation from
a constant value of this ratio is the oscillation signature. In this scheme
results do not depend on the exact knowledge of the reactor power, nu_e
spectra, burn up effects, target volumes and, which is important, the
backgrounds can periodically be measured during reactor OFF periods. In this
letter we present the Krasnoyarsk reactor site, give a schematic description of
the detectors, calculate the neutrino detection rates and estimate the
backgrounds. We also outline the detector monitoring and calibration
procedures, which are of a key importance. We hope that systematic
uncertainties will not accede 0.5% and the sensitivity U^{2}_{e3} ~4 10^{-3}
(at {\Delta}m^{2} = 2.5 10^{-3} eV^2) can be achieved.Comment: Latex 2e, 9 pages and 5 ps figure
Tropical Dominating Sets in Vertex-Coloured Graphs
Given a vertex-coloured graph, a dominating set is said to be tropical if
every colour of the graph appears at least once in the set. Here, we study
minimum tropical dominating sets from structural and algorithmic points of
view. First, we prove that the tropical dominating set problem is NP-complete
even when restricted to a simple path. Then, we establish upper bounds related
to various parameters of the graph such as minimum degree and number of edges.
We also give upper bounds for random graphs. Last, we give approximability and
inapproximability results for general and restricted classes of graphs, and
establish a FPT algorithm for interval graphs.Comment: 19 pages, 4 figure
Algorithmic aspects of disjunctive domination in graphs
For a graph , a set is called a \emph{disjunctive
dominating set} of if for every vertex , is either
adjacent to a vertex of or has at least two vertices in at distance
from it. The cardinality of a minimum disjunctive dominating set of is
called the \emph{disjunctive domination number} of graph , and is denoted by
. The \textsc{Minimum Disjunctive Domination Problem} (MDDP)
is to find a disjunctive dominating set of cardinality .
Given a positive integer and a graph , the \textsc{Disjunctive
Domination Decision Problem} (DDDP) is to decide whether has a disjunctive
dominating set of cardinality at most . In this article, we first propose a
linear time algorithm for MDDP in proper interval graphs. Next we tighten the
NP-completeness of DDDP by showing that it remains NP-complete even in chordal
graphs. We also propose a -approximation
algorithm for MDDP in general graphs and prove that MDDP can not be
approximated within for any unless NP
DTIME. Finally, we show that MDDP is
APX-complete for bipartite graphs with maximum degree
Approximating Clustering of Fingerprint Vectors with Missing Values
The problem of clustering fingerprint vectors is an interesting problem in
Computational Biology that has been proposed in (Figureroa et al. 2004). In
this paper we show some improvements in closing the gaps between the known
lower bounds and upper bounds on the approximability of some variants of the
biological problem. Namely we are able to prove that the problem is APX-hard
even when each fingerprint contains only two unknown position. Moreover we have
studied some variants of the orginal problem, and we give two 2-approximation
algorithm for the IECMV and OECMV problems when the number of unknown entries
for each vector is at most a constant.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure
On the possiblity of detecting Solar pp-neutrino with a large volume liquid organic scintillator detector
It is shown that a large volume liquid organic scintillator detector with an
energy resolution of 10 keV at 200 keV 1 sigma will be sensitive to solar
pp-neutrino, if operated at the target radiopurity levels for the Borexino
detector, or the solar neutrino project of KamLAND.Comment: 18 pages, 2 figures, 4 tables. Contributed paper to the
Nonaccelerating New Neutrino Physic. NANP-2003, Dubna. To be published in
Phys.At.Nucl.(2004
New limits on nucleon decays into invisible channels with the BOREXINO Counting Test Facility
The results of background measurements with the second version of the
BOREXINO Counting Test Facility (CTF-II), installed in the Gran Sasso
Underground Laboratory, were used to obtain limits on the instability of
nucleons, bounded in nuclei, for decays into invisible channels ():
disappearance, decays to neutrinos, etc. The approach consisted of a search for
decays of unstable nuclides resulting from and decays of parents
C, C and O nuclei in the liquid scintillator and the water
shield of the CTF. Due to the extremely low background and the large mass (4.2
ton) of the CTF detector, the most stringent (or competitive) up-to-date
experimental bounds have been established: y, y, y and y, all at 90% C.L.Comment: 22 pages, 3 figures,submitted to Phys.Lett.
Parameterized Complexity of the k-anonymity Problem
The problem of publishing personal data without giving up privacy is becoming
increasingly important. An interesting formalization that has been recently
proposed is the -anonymity. This approach requires that the rows of a table
are partitioned in clusters of size at least and that all the rows in a
cluster become the same tuple, after the suppression of some entries. The
natural optimization problem, where the goal is to minimize the number of
suppressed entries, is known to be APX-hard even when the records values are
over a binary alphabet and , and when the records have length at most 8
and . In this paper we study how the complexity of the problem is
influenced by different parameters. In this paper we follow this direction of
research, first showing that the problem is W[1]-hard when parameterized by the
size of the solution (and the value ). Then we exhibit a fixed parameter
algorithm, when the problem is parameterized by the size of the alphabet and
the number of columns. Finally, we investigate the computational (and
approximation) complexity of the -anonymity problem, when restricting the
instance to records having length bounded by 3 and . We show that such a
restriction is APX-hard.Comment: 22 pages, 2 figure
Pulse-Shape discrimination with the Counting Test Facility
Pulse shape discrimination (PSD) is one of the most distinctive features of
liquid scintillators. Since the introduction of the scintillation techniques in
the field of particle detection, many studies have been carried out to
characterize intrinsic properties of the most common liquid scintillator
mixtures in this respect. Several application methods and algorithms able to
achieve optimum discrimination performances have been developed. However, the
vast majority of these studies have been performed on samples of small
dimensions. The Counting Test Facility, prototype of the solar neutrino
experiment Borexino, as a 4 ton spherical scintillation detector immersed in
1000 tons of shielding water, represents a unique opportunity to extend the
small-sample PSD studies to a large-volume setup. Specifically, in this work we
consider two different liquid scintillation mixtures employed in CTF,
illustrating for both the PSD characterization results obtained either with the
processing of the scintillation waveform through the optimum Gatti's method, or
via a more conventional approach based on the charge content of the
scintillation tail. The outcomes of this study, while interesting per se, are
also of paramount importance in view of the expected Borexino detector
performances, where PSD will be an essential tool in the framework of the
background rejection strategy needed to achieve the required sensitivity to the
solar neutrino signals.Comment: 39 pages, 17 figures, submitted to Nucl. Instr. Meth.
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