2,208 research outputs found
Coherent elastic neutrino-nucleus scattering -- First constraints/observations and future potential
The detection of coherent elastic neutrino-nucleus scattering (CENS) opens new possibilities for neutrino physics within and beyond the Standard Model. Following the initial discovery in 2017, several experimental attempts have emerged allowing this reaction channel to be studied with the full repertoire of modern detection technologies. As one of several reactor experiments, CONUS aims for an observation with antineutrinos emitted from the powerful GW reactor of the nuclear power plant in Brokdorf (Germany). In particular, the application of ultra-low threshold, high-purity germanium detectors within a sophisticated shield design in close proximity to a nuclear reactor core represents an important step towards high-statistics neutrino detection with small-scale detectors. In addition to the conventional interaction, typical extensions of the Standard Model neutrino sector can be investigated with data provided from different neutrino sources and several target materials. Among these, new neutrino interactions as well as electromagnetic neutrino properties are of particular interest. This talk gives an overview of existing CENS results and highlights the advantage of using different neutrino sources and target materials. The example of CONUS is used to demonstrate the various capabilities of recent and future CENS measurements
Leptonic CP violation in the minimal type-I seesaw model : Bottom-up phenomenology & top-down model building
This work deals with a minimal realization of the type-I seesaw model with only two right-handed Majorana neutrinos, which is investigated from two perspectives; bottom-up and top-down. In a data-driven approach, the manifestation of certain hierarchies in the neutrino Yukawa matrix is analyzed in the context of realizable approximate two-zero textures. A general method for the investigation of Yukawa structures is developed and applied to the minimal seesaw model. Besides a robustness study of the obtained results, theoretical error bars are assigned to this model's predictions. In a top-down ansatz, a high-energy embedding of the minimal seesaw model is built that exhibits minimal degrees of freedom. A minimal SU(5) Froggatt-Nielsen avor model is chosen and assuming approximate exchange symmetries in the heavy neutrino sector helps to reduce the model's free parameter. Demanding consistency with electroweak naturalness and leptogenesis leads to a most minimal type-I seesaw model, that emerges from a high-energy theory and predicts at the same time all measured neutrino observables
Coherent elastic neutrino-nucleus scattering -- First constraints/observations and future potential
The detection of coherent elastic neutrino-nucleus scattering (CENS)opens new possibilities for neutrino physics within and beyond the StandardModel. Following the initial discovery in 2017, several experimental attemptshave emerged allowing this reaction channel to be studied with the fullrepertoire of modern detection technologies. As one of several reactorexperiments, CONUS aims for an observation with antineutrinos emitted from thepowerful GW reactor of the nuclear power plant in Brokdorf(Germany). In particular, the application of ultra-low threshold, high-puritygermanium detectors within a sophisticated shield design in close proximity toa nuclear reactor core represents an important step towards high-statisticsneutrino detection with small-scale detectors. In addition to the conventionalinteraction, typical extensions of the Standard Model neutrino sector can beinvestigated with data provided from different neutrino sources and severaltarget materials. Among these, new neutrino interactions as well aselectromagnetic neutrino properties are of particular interest. This talk givesan overview of existing CENS results and highlights the advantage of usingdifferent neutrino sources and target materials. The example of CONUS is usedto demonstrate the various capabilities of recent and future CENSmeasurements.<br
Canonical Transformation Approach to the Ultrafast Non-linear Optical Dynamics of Semiconductors
We develop a theory describing the effects of many-particle Coulomb
correlations on the coherent ultrafast nonlinear optical response of
semiconductors and metals. Our approach is based on a mapping of the nonlinear
optical response of the ``bare'' system onto the linear response of a
``dressed'' system. The latter is characterized by effective time-dependent
optical transition matrix elements, electron/hole dispersions, and interaction
potentials, which in undoped semiconductors are determined by the
single-exciton and two-exciton Green functions in the absence of optical
fields. This mapping is achieved by eliminating the optically-induced charge
fluctuations from the Hamiltonian using a Van Vleck canonical transformation.
It takes into account all many-body contributions up to a given order in the
optical fields as well as important Coulomb-induced quantum dynamics to all
orders in the optical field. Our approach allows us to distinguish between
optical nonlinearities of different origins and provides a physically-intuitive
interpretation of their manifestations in ultrafast coherent nonlinear optical
spectroscopy.Comment: 24 page
\u3ci\u3eAcrobasis\u3c/i\u3e Shoot Moth (Lepidoptera: Pyralidae) Infestation-Tree Height Link in a Young Black Walnut Plantation
Acrobasis shoot moth infestations were evaluated in a young black walnut progeny test for 4 years, from ages 3 to 6. Infestation levels were greatest on the largest trees in the fourth and fifth year after plantation establishment, and were declining by the sixth year. Acrobasis infestation appears to be a problem primarily on young trees less than 2.5 m in height. There was no evidence for genetic resistance to Acrobasis infestation in black walnut
Constraints on pseudo-Dirac neutrinos using high-energy neutrinos from NGC 1068
Neutrinos can be pseudo-Dirac in Nature - they can be Majorana fermions whilebehaving effectively as Dirac fermions. Such scenarios predict active-sterileneutrino oscillation driven by a tiny mass-squared difference ,which is an outcome of soft-lepton number violation. Oscillations due to tiny can take place only over astrophysical baselines and hence are notaccessible in terrestrial neutrino oscillation experiments. This implies thathigh-energy neutrinos coming from large distances can naturally be used to testthis scenario. We use the recent observation of high-energy neutrinos from theactive galactic nuclei NGC 1068 by the IceCube collaboration to constrain at more than confidence level - oneof the strongest limits to date on the values of .<br
Kolmogorov condition near hyperbolic singularities of integrable Hamiltonian systems
In this paper we show that, if an integrable Hamiltonian system admits a
nondegenerate hyperbolic singularity then it will satisfy the Kolmogorov
condegeneracy condition near that singularity (under a mild additional
condition, which is trivial if the singularity contains a fixed point)Comment: revised version, 11p, accepted for publication in a sepecial volume
in Regular and Chaotic Dynamics in honor of Richard Cushma
Neutron-induced background in the CONUS experiment
CONUS is a novel experiment aiming at detecting elastic neutrino nucleus
scattering in the fully coherent regime using high-purity Germanium (Ge)
detectors and a reactor as antineutrino () source. The detector setup
is installed at the commercial nuclear power plant in Brokdorf, Germany, at a
very small distance to the reactor core in order to guarantee a high flux of
more than 10/(scm). For the experiment, a good
understanding of neutron-induced background events is required, as the neutron
recoil signals can mimic the predicted neutrino interactions. Especially
neutron-induced events correlated with the thermal power generation are
troublesome for CONUS. On-site measurements revealed the presence of a thermal
power correlated, highly thermalized neutron field with a fluence rate of
(74530)cmd. These neutrons that are produced by nuclear
fission inside the reactor core, are reduced by a factor of 10 on
their way to the CONUS shield. With a high-purity Ge detector without shield
the -ray background was examined including highly thermal power
correlated N decay products as well as -lines from neutron
capture. Using the measured neutron spectrum as input, it was shown, with the
help of Monte Carlo simulations, that the thermal power correlated field is
successfully mitigated by the installed CONUS shield. The reactor-induced
background contribution in the region of interest is exceeded by the expected
signal by at least one order of magnitude assuming a realistic ionization
quenching factor of 0.2.Comment: 28 pages, 28 figure
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