1,439 research outputs found
Limits on nu_e and anti-nu_e disappearance from Gallium and reactor experiments
The deficit observed in the Gallium radioactive source experiments is
interpreted as a possible indication of the disappearance of electron
neutrinos. In the effective framework of two-neutrino mixing we obtain
and . The compatibility of this result with the data of the Bugey and
Chooz reactor short-baseline antineutrino disappearance experiments is studied.
It is found that the Bugey data present a hint of neutrino oscillations with
and , which is compatible with the Gallium allowed region of the
mixing parameters. This hint persists in the combined analyses of Bugey and
Chooz data, of Gallium and Bugey data, and of Gallium, Bugey, and Chooz data.Comment: 21 pages. Final version to be published in Phys. Rev.
Dirac Spinors and Flavor Oscillations
In the standard treatment of particle oscillations the mass eigenstates are
implicitly assumed to be scalars and, consequently, the spinorial form of
neutrino wave functions is not included in the calculations. To analyze this
additional effect, we discuss the oscillation probability formula obtained by
using the Dirac equation as evolution equation for the neutrino mass
eigenstates. The initial localization of the spinor state also implies an
interference between positive and negative energy components of mass eigenstate
wave packets which modifies the standard oscillation probability.Comment: 14 pages, 1 figure, AMS-Te
Squeezed Neutrino Oscillations in Quantum Field Theory
By resorting to recent results on fermion mixing which show that the Fock
space of definite flavor states is unitarily inequivalent to the Fock space of
definite mass states, we discuss the phenomenological implications on the
neutrino oscillation formula. For finite momentum the oscillation amplitude is
depressed, or "squeezed", by a momentum dependent factor. In the relativistic
limit the conventional oscillation formula is recovered.Comment: 12 pages, LaTex, 1 figure ( on request ), in press on Phys. Lett. B.
(minor changes: reformatted
Joint short- and long-baseline constraints on light sterile neutrinos
Recent studies provide evidence that long-baseline (LBL) experiments are sensitive to the extra CP phases involved with light sterile neutrinos, whose existence is suggested by several anomalous short-baseline (SBL) results. We show that, within the 3+1 scheme, the combination of the existing SBL data with the LBL results coming from the two currently running experiments, NO\u3bdA and T2K, enables us to simultaneously constrain two active-sterile mixing angles, \u3b814 and \u3b824, and two CP phases, \u3b413 61\u3b4 and \u3b414, although the information on the second CP phase is still weak. The two mixing angles are basically determined by the SBL data, while the two CP phases are constrained by the LBL experiments, once the information coming from the SBL setups is taken into account. We also assess the robustness or fragility of the estimates of the standard 3-flavor parameters in the more general 3+1 scheme. To this regard we find that (i) the indication of CP violation found in the 3-flavor analyses persists also in the 3+1 scheme, with \u3b413 61\u3b4 having still its best-fit value around 12\u3c0/2, (ii) the 3-flavor weak hint in favor of the normal hierarchy becomes even less significant when sterile neutrinos come into play, (iii) the weak indication of nonmaximal \u3b823 (driven by NO\u3bdA disappearance data) persists in the 3+1 scheme, where maximal mixing is disfavored at almost the 90% C.L. in both normal and inverted mass hierarchy, and (iv) the preference in favor of one of the two octants of \u3b823 found in the 3-flavor framework (higher octant for inverted mass hierarchy) is completely washed out in the 3+1 scheme
Four-neutrino mixing solutions of the atmospheric neutrino anomaly
Solutions to the atmospheric neutrino anomaly which smoothly interpolate
between nu_mu -> nu_tau and nu_mu -> nu_s oscillations are studied. It is shown
that, although the Super-Kamiokande data disfavor the pure nu_mu -> nu_s
channel, one cannot exclude sizable amplitude for the nu_mu -> nu_s channel in
addition to nu_mu -> nu_tau oscillations.Comment: Talk given at Europhysics Neutrino Oscillation Workshop (NOW2000),
Conca Specchiulla, Otranto, Lecce, Ita, 9-16 Sep 200
Neutrino oscillations: Quantum mechanics vs. quantum field theory
A consistent description of neutrino oscillations requires either the
quantum-mechanical (QM) wave packet approach or a quantum field theoretic (QFT)
treatment. We compare these two approaches to neutrino oscillations and discuss
the correspondence between them. In particular, we derive expressions for the
QM neutrino wave packets from QFT and relate the free parameters of the QM
framework, in particular the effective momentum uncertainty of the neutrino
state, to the more fundamental parameters of the QFT approach. We include in
our discussion the possibilities that some of the neutrino's interaction
partners are not detected, that the neutrino is produced in the decay of an
unstable parent particle, and that the overlap of the wave packets of the
particles involved in the neutrino production (or detection) process is not
maximal. Finally, we demonstrate how the properly normalized oscillation
probabilities can be obtained in the QFT framework without an ad hoc
normalization procedure employed in the QM approach.Comment: LaTeX, 42 pages, 1 figure; v2: minor clarifications, matches
published version; v3: Corrected the discussion of the conditions under which
an oscillation probability can be sensibly defined in the QFT approach (sec.
5.2.4
An Analytic Approach to the Wave Packet Formalism in Oscillation Phenomena
We introduce an approximation scheme to perform an analytic study of the
oscillation phenomena in a pedagogical and comprehensive way. By using Gaussian
wave packets, we show that the oscillation is bounded by a time-dependent
vanishing function which characterizes the slippage between the mass-eigenstate
wave packets. We also demonstrate that the wave packet spreading represents a
secondary effect which plays a significant role only in the non-relativistic
limit. In our analysis, we note the presence of a new time-dependent phase and
calculate how this additional term modifies the oscillating character of the
flavor conversion formula. Finally, by considering Box and Sine wave packets we
study how the choice of different functions to describe the particle
localization changes the oscillation probability.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figures, AMS-Te
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