1,384 research outputs found
Antineutrino Geophysics with Liquid Scintillator Detectors
Detecting the antineutrinos emitted by the decay of radioactive elements in
the mantle and crust could provide a direct measurement of the total abundance
of uranium and thorium in the Earth. In calculating the antineutrino flux at
specific sites, the local geology of the crust and the background from the
world's nuclear power reactors are important considerations. Employing a global
crustal map, with type and thickness data, and using recent estimates of the
uranium and thorium distribution in the Earth, we calculate the antineutrino
event rate for two new neutrino detectors. We show that spectral features allow
terrestrial antineutrino events to be identified above reactor antineutrino
backgrounds and that the uranium and thorium contributions can be separately
determined.Comment: Published paper differs from original submitted preprint because
reviewers suggested updated continental crust U/Th abundances. Kamioka
geographical location error was in preprint, partially corrected in published
version. This version is the same as the published paper, with Kamioka fully
corrected. Because of recent interest in this topic, this version is being
made available, despite this work being 8 years ol
Formation of convective cells in the scrape-off layer of the CASTOR tokamak
Understanding of the scrape-off layer (SOL) physics in tokamaks requires
diagnostics with sufficient temporal and spatial resolution. This contribution
describes results of experiments performed in the SOL of the CASTOR tokamak
(R=40 cm, a = 6 cm) by means of a ring of 124 Langmuir probes surrounding the
whole poloidal cross section. The individual probes measure either the ion
saturation current of the floating potential with the spatial resolution up to
3 mm. Experiments are performed in a particular magnetic configuration,
characterized by a long parallel connection length in the SOL, L_par ~q2piR. We
report on measurements in discharges, where the edge electric field is modified
by inserting a biased electrode into the edge plasma. In particular, a complex
picture is observed, if the biased electrode is located inside the SOL. The
poloidal distribution of the floating potential appears to be strongly
non-uniform at biasing. The peaks of potential are observed at particular
poloidal angles. This is interpreted as formation of a biased flux tube, which
emanates from the electrode along the magnetic field lines and snakes q times
around the torus. The resulting electric field in the SOL is 2-dimensional,
having the radial as well as the poloidal component. It is demonstrated that
the poloidal electric field E_pol convects the edge plasma radially due to the
E_pol x B_T drift either inward or outward depending on its sign. The
convective particle flux is by two orders of magnitude larger than the
fluctuation-induced one and consequently dominates.Comment: 12th International Congress on Plasma Physics, 25-29 October 2004,
Nice (France
Low Energy Neutrino Physics after SNO and KamLAND
In the recent years important discoveries in the field of low energy neutrino
physics (E in the MeV range) have been achieved. Results of the
solar neutrino experiment SNO show clearly flavor transitions from to
. In addition, the long standing solar neutrino problem is
basically solved. With KamLAND, an experiment measuring neutrinos emitted from
nuclear reactors at large distances, evidence for neutrino oscillations has
been found. The values for the oscillation parameters, amplitude and phase,
have been restricted. In this paper the potential of future projects in low
energy neutrino physics is discussed. This encompasses future solar and reactor
experiments as well as the direct search for neutrino masses. Finally the
potential of a large liquid scintillator detector in an underground laboratory
for supernova neutrino detection, solar neutrino detection, and the search for
proton decay is discussed.Comment: Invited brief review, World Scientific Publishing Compan
Final results from the Palo Verde Neutrino Oscillation Experiment
The analysis and results are presented from the complete data set recorded at
Palo Verde between September 1998 and July 2000. In the experiment, the
\nuebar interaction rate has been measured at a distance of 750 and 890 m
from the reactors of the Palo Verde Nuclear Generating Station for a total of
350 days, including 108 days with one of the three reactors off for refueling.
Backgrounds were determined by (a) the technique based on the difference
between signal and background under reversal of the positron and neutron parts
of the correlated event and (b) making use of the conventional reactor-on and
reactor-off cycles. There is no evidence for neutrino oscillation and the mode
\nuebar\to\bar\nu_x was excluded at 90% CL for \dm>1.1\times10^{-3} eV
at full mixing, and \sinq>0.17 at large \dm.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figure
Maximum likelihood analysis of the first KamLAND results
A maximum likelihood approach has been used to analize the first results from
KamLAND emphasizing the application of this method for low statistics samples.
The goodness of fit has been determined exploiting a simple Monte Carlo
approach in order to test two different null hytpotheses. It turns out that
with the present statistics the neutrino oscillation hypothesis has a
significance of about 90% (the best-fit for the oscillation parameters from
KamLAND are found to be: eV and
), while the no-oscillation hypothesis of
about 50%. Through the likelihood ratio the hypothesis of no disappearence is
rejected at about 99.9% C.L. with the present data from the positron spectrum.
A comparison with other analyses is presented.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figure
Accelerator and Reactor Neutrino Oscillation Experiments in a Simple Three-Generation Framework
We present a new approach to the analysis of neutrino oscillation
experiments, in the one mass-scale limit of the three-generation scheme. In
this framework we reanalyze and recombine the most constraining accelerator and
reactor data, in order to draw precise bounds in the new parameter space. We
consider our graphical representations as particularly suited to show the
interplay among the different oscillation channels. Within the same framework,
the discovery potential of future short and long baseline experiments is also
investigated, in the light of both the recent signal from the LSND experiment
and the atmospheric neutrino anomaly.Comment: uuencoded compressed tar file. Figures (13) available by ftp to
ftp://eku.sns.ias.edu/pub/lisi/ (192.16.204.30). Submitted to Physical Review
R2D2 - a symmetric measurement of reactor neutrinos free of systematical errors
We discuss a symmetric setup for a reactor neutrino oscillation experiment
consisting of two reactors separated by about 1 km, and two symmetrically
placed detectors, one close to each reactor. We show that such a configuration
allows a determination of which is essentially free of
systematical errors, if it is possible to separate the contributions of the two
reactors in each detector sufficiently. This can be achieved either by
considering data when in an alternating way only one reactor is running or by
directional sensitivity obtained from the neutron displacement in the detector.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, clarifications added, some numbers in relation
with the neutron displacement corrected, version to appear in JHE
Dark Matter Spin-Dependent Limits for WIMP Interactions on 19-F by PICASSO
The PICASSO experiment at SNOLAB reports new results for spin-dependent WIMP
interactions on F using the superheated droplet technique. A new
generation of detectors and new features which enable background discrimination
via the rejection of non-particle induced events are described. First results
are presented for a subset of two detectors with target masses of F of
65 g and 69 g respectively and a total exposure of 13.75 0.48 kgd. No
dark matter signal was found and for WIMP masses around 24 GeV/c new limits
have been obtained on the spin-dependent cross section on F of
= 13.9 pb (90% C.L.) which can be converted into cross section
limits on protons and neutrons of = 0.16 pb and = 2.60 pb
respectively (90% C.L). The obtained limits on protons restrict recent
interpretations of the DAMA/LIBRA annual modulations in terms of spin-dependent
interactions.Comment: Revised version, accepted for publication in Phys. Lett. B, 20 pages,
7 figure
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