378 research outputs found
Testing the very-short-baseline neutrino anomalies at the solar sector
Motivated by the accumulating hints of new sterile neutrino species at the eV
scale, we explore the consequences of such an hypothesis on the solar sector
phenomenology. After introducing the theoretical formalism needed to describe
the MSW conversion of solar neutrinos in the presence of one (or more) sterile
neutrino state(s) located "far" from the (nu_1,nu_2) "doublet", we perform a
quantitative analysis of the available experimental results, focusing on the
electron neutrino mixing. We find that the present data posses a sensitivity to
the amplitude of the lepton mixing matrix element U_e4 --- encoding the
admixture of the electron neutrino with a new mass eigenstate --- which is
comparable to that achieved on the standard matrix element U_e3. In addition,
and more importantly, our analysis evidences that, in a 4-flavor framework, the
current preference for |U_e3|>0 is indistinguishable from that for |U_e4|>0,
having both a similar statistical significance (which is ~ 1.3 sigma adopting
the old reactor fluxes determinations, and ~ 1.8 sigma using their new
estimates). We also point out that, differently from the standard 3-flavor
case, in a 3+1 scheme the Dirac CP-violating phases cannot be eliminated from
the description of solar neutrino conversions.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figures; minor changes; matches version published in PR
Phenomenology of light sterile neutrinos: a brief review
An increasing number of anomalous experimental results are emerging, which
cannot be described within the standard 3-neutrino framework. We present a
concise discussion of the most popular phenomenological interpretation of such
findings, based on a hypothetical flavor conversion phenomenon of the ordinary
"active" neutrinos into new light "sterile" species having mass m ~ O(1) eV.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, invited review for MPLA, added references,
matches published versio
Consistent analysis of the sterile neutrinos searches of ICARUS and OPERA
The two long-baseline experiments ICARUS and OPERA have recently provided
bounds on light ( eV) sterile neutrinos exploiting the negative results
of the appearance searches. Both collaborations have
performed the data analysis using an effective 2-flavor description. We show
that such a simplified treatment neglects sizable genuine 4-flavor effects,
which are induced by the interference of the new large squared-mass splitting
with the atmospheric one. The inclusion in the data analysis
of such effects weakens the upper bounds on the effective appearance amplitude
approximately by a factor of two. In addition, we
evidence that, in a 4-flavor scheme, the flavor oscillations involve also the
component of the CNGS beam and can suppress the theoretical expectation
of the background in a substantial way. The inclusion in the data analysis of
the disappearance effects leads to a further weakening of the upper
bounds on , which overall are relaxed by a factor of
three with respect to those obtained in the effective 2-flavor description.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures; references updated; to appear in PRD as a Rapid
Communicatio
A conceptual issue on the statistical determination of the neutrino velocity
We discuss a conceptual issue concerning the neutrino velocity measurement,
in connection with the statistical method employed by the OPERA collaboration
for the inference of the neutrino time of flight. We expound the theoretical
framework that underlies the delicate statistical procedure illustrating its
salient aspects. In particular, we show that the order of the two operations of
sum and normalization used to combine the single waveforms so as to build the
global PDF is a crucial point. We also illustrate how a consistency check able
to test the correctness of the PDF-composing procedure should be designed.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures, discussion enlarged and divided in seven
sections; matches version accepted for publication in NIMA (Nuclear
Instruments and Methods in Physics Research, Section A
Constraints on very light sterile neutrinos from -sensitive reactor experiments
Three dedicated reactor experiments, Double Chooz, RENO and Daya Bay, have
recently performed a precision measurement of the third standard mixing angle
exploiting a multiple baseline comparison of
disappearance driven by the atmospheric mass-squared splitting. In this paper
we show how the same technique can be used to put stringent limits on the
oscillations of the electron neutrino into a fourth very light sterile species
(VLS) characterized by a mass-squared difference lying in the range
[] eV. We present accurate constraints on the admixture
obtained by a 4-flavor analysis of the publicly available reactor
data. In addition, we show that the estimate of obtained by the
combination of the three reactor experiments is rather robust and substantially
independent of the 4-flavor-induced perturbations provided that the new
mass-squared splitting is not too low ( eV). We
briefly comment on the possible impact of VLS's on the rest of the
neutrino oscillation phenomenology and emphasize their potential role in the
cosmological "dark radiation" anomaly.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures, added references, version published in JHE
Physics Reach of DUNE with a Light Sterile Neutrino
We investigate the implications of one light eV scale sterile neutrino on the
physics potential of the proposed long-baseline experiment DUNE. If the future
short-baseline experiments confirm the existence of sterile neutrinos, then it
can affect the mass hierarchy (MH) and CP-violation (CPV) searches at DUNE. The
MH sensitivity still remains above 5 if the three new mixing angles
() are all close to . In
contrast, it can decrease to 4 if the least constrained mixing angle
is close to its upper limit . We also assess the
sensitivity to the CPV induced both by the standard CP-phase , and the new CP-phases and . In the
3+1 scheme, the discovery potential of CPV induced by gets
deteriorated compared to the 3 case. In particular, the maximal
sensitivity (reached around ) decreases from
to if all the three new mixing angles are close to
. It can further diminish to almost if is
large (). The sensitivity to the CPV due to can reach
3 for an appreciable fraction of its true values. Interestingly,
and its associated phase can influence both the
appearance and disappearance channels via matter effects,
which in DUNE are pronounced. Hence, DUNE can also probe CPV induced by
provided is large. We also reconstruct the two
phases and . The typical 1 uncertainty on
() is () if . The
reconstruction of (but not that of ) degrades if
is large.Comment: 26 pages, 8 figures, 2 tables. Minor revisions. Accepted in JHE
Octant of in danger with a light sterile neutrino
Present global fits of world neutrino data hint towards non-maximal
with two nearly degenerate solutions, one in the lower octant
(), and the other in the higher octant (). This octant ambiguity of is one of the fundamental
issues in the neutrino sector, and its resolution is a crucial goal of
next-generation long-baseline (LBL) experiments. In this letter, we address for
the first time, the impact of a light eV-scale sterile neutrino towards such a
measurement, taking the Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment (DUNE) as a case
study. In the so-called 3+1 scheme involving three active and one sterile
neutrino, the transition probability probed in the LBL
experiments acquires a new interference term via active-sterile oscillations.
We find that this novel interference term can mimic a swap of the
octant, even if one uses the information from both neutrino and antineutrino
channels. As a consequence, the sensitivity to the octant of can
be completely lost and this may have serious implications in our understanding
of neutrinos from both the experimental and theoretical perspectives.Comment: Brief note added; accepted for publication in Physical Review Letter
An estimate of theta_14 independent of the reactor antineutrino flux determinations
In a previous paper [Phys. Rev. D 83, 113013 (2011)] we have shown that the
solar sector data (solar and KamLAND) are sensitive to the parameter theta_14,
encoding the admixture of the electron neutrino with a fourth (essentially)
sterile mass eigenstate. In that work we evidenced that such data prefer a
non-zero value of theta_14 and that such a preference is completely degenerate
with that of non-zero theta_13. In this report we show how the evidence of
theta_13 > 0, recently emerged from global neutrino data analyses, lifts such a
degeneracy and disfavors the case of sterile neutrino mixing. By excluding from
our analysis the total rate information coming from the reactor experiments we
untie our results from any assumption on their flux normalization. In this way,
we establish the robust upper bound sin^2 (theta_14) < 0.04 at the 90% C.L.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, minor changes, matches version accepted by PR
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