Neutrino Scattering Physics with - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 26
About This Presentation
Title:

Neutrino Scattering Physics with

Description:

1934 - Enrico Fermi develops a comprehensive theory of radioactive decays, ... First direct evidence for the nt announced at Fermilab by DONUT collaboration. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:43
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 27
Provided by: tri562
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Neutrino Scattering Physics with


1
Neutrino Scattering Physics with the Fermilab
Proton Driver Introductory Overview
Conveners Jorge G. Morfín (Fermilab) Ron Ransome
(Rutgers) Rex Tayloe (Indiana)
2
A bit of history 1930-Wolfgang Pauli Dear
Radioactive Ladies and Gentlemen.
3
Milestones in the History of Neutrino Physics
  • 1934 - Enrico Fermi develops a comprehensive
    theory of radioactive decays, including Pauli's
    hypothetical particle, which Fermi coins the
    neutrino (Italian "little neutral one").
  • 1959 - Discovery of a particle fitting the
    expected characteristics of the neutrino is
    announced by Clyde Cowan and Fred Reines.
  • 1962 - Experiment at Brookhaven National
    Laboratory discovered a second type of neutrino
    (nm).
  • 1968 - The first experiment to detect ne produced
    by the Sun's burning (using a liquid Chlorine
    target deep underground) reports that less than
    half the expected neutrinos are observed.
  • 1985 - The IMB experiment observes fewer
    atmospheric nm interactions than expected.
  • 1989 - Kamiokande becomes the second experiment
    to detect ne from the Sun finding only about 1/3
    the expected rate.
  • 1994 - Kamiokande finds that nm travelling the
    greatest distances from the point of production
    to the detector exhibit the greatest depletion.
  • 1997 - Super-Kamiokande reports a deficit of
    cosmic-ray nm and solar ne, at rates agreeing
    with earlier experiments.
  • 1998 - The Super-Kamiokande collaboration
    announces evidence of non-zero neutrino mass at
    the Neutrino '98 conference.
  • 2000 - First direct evidence for the nt
    announced at Fermilab by DONUT collaboration.
  • 2004 - APS Multi-divisional Neutrino Study.
  • 2005 - MiniBooNe announces result - yes/no/maybe
    LSND correct, MINOS starts data-taking.

4
What are the Open Questions in Neutrino
PhysicsFrom the APS Multi-Divisional Study on
the Physics of Neutrinos
  • What are the masses of the neutrinos?
  • What is the pattern of mixing among the different
    types of neutrinos?
  • Are neutrinos their own antiparticles?
  • Do neutrinos violate the symmetry CP?
  • Are there sterile neutrinos?
  • Do neutrinos have unexpected or exotic
    properties?
  • What can neutrinos tell us about the models of
    new physics beyond the Standard Model?
  • The answer to almost every one of these questions
    involves understanding how neutrinos interact
    with matter!
  • Among the APS study assumptions about the current
    and future program
  • determination of the neutrino reaction and
    production cross sections required for a precise
    understanding of neutrino-oscillation physics and
    the neutrino astronomy of astrophysical and
    cosmological sources. Our broad and exacting
    program of neutrino physics is built upon precise
    knowledge of how neutrinos interact with matter.

5
Outline of the Study of Neutrino Scattering
Physics
  • What motivates further study of neutrino
    scattering physics?
  • EPP needs - future Wednesday talk
  • NP needs - future Wednesday talk
  • What will we know by the start of a Fermilab
    Proton Driver (FPD)?
  • Snapshot of expected experimental results at FPD
    start-up
  • What can best/only be done with the FPD?
  • Is there anything left to do and reason to do it?
  • What tools do we need to do it?
  • Designer beams
  • Specialized detectors

6
Whats actually happening in Neutrino-Nucleus
Scattering
  • A / N / q gt
    n / m H
  • Nucleus/nucleon/quark NC / CC
  • We dont know incoming neutrino energy.
  • We dont know, a priori, if it interacts with
    nucleus, nucleon or quark.
  • For CC event, we infer incoming neutrino energy
    from measured final-state energy.
  • Since sT is small (order 10-(38-40) cm2) need
    intense neutrino beams and/or massive
    target/detectors.
  • Using a massive target/detectors masks details of
    the final state including the energy.
  • We need an intense neutrino beam so we can gather
    significant statistics with a fine-grained, low-A
    target/detector to see details.

7
In spite of (because of) the experimental
challenges, Neutrino Scattering Physics at FPD
brings together several communities
  • EPP - motivated by increased understanding of
    physics relevant to neutrino oscillation
    experiments, properties of the neutrino and
    structure of nucleon
  • NP - motivated by understanding of physics
    complementary to the Jlab program (form
    factors, structure of nucleon)

Neutrinos from 8 GeV Protons Limited scope of
physics topics Minimize backgrounds from higher
energies Specialized study of very low-energy
phenomena
Neutrinos from 120 GeV Protons Extended scope of
physics topics to cover quasi-elastic to
DIS Must understand/study backgrounds Neutrino
energies similar to JLab
8
Motivation EPP - Neutrino Oscillation
requirements Future Wednesday talk for details
  • ne appearance needs
  • Coherent pion cross sections
  • Robust predictions from CC and NC processes
  • High y nm cross sections
  • If signal is seen, we really need QE and
  • resonance cross sections much better than we
    have now
  • Control neutrino/anti-neutrino systematics at 1
    percent level for mass hierarchy and CP
    studies.
  • High Statistics nm disappearance needs
  • Measurements of Nuclear effects in neutrinos
  • neutrino energy calibration
  • Ratio of Quasi-elastic to non-Quasi-elastic cross
    sections

9
Motivation Nuclear Physics Interest - Ron
Ransome Future Wednesday talk for details
Significant overlap with JLab physics for 1-10
GeV neutrinos
Four major topics Nucleon Form Factors -
particularly the axial vector FF Duality -
transition from resonance to DIS
(non-perturbative to perturbative QCD)
Parton Distribution Functions - particularly
high-xBJ Generalized Parton Distributions -
multi-dimensional description of partons
within the nucleon
10
Neutrino Scattering Topics
  • Quasi-elastic
  • Resonance Production - 1pi
  • Resonance Production - npi, transition region -
    resonance to DIS
  • Deep-Inelastic Scattering
  • Coherent Pion Production
  • Strange and Charm Particle Production
  • sT , Structure Functions and PDFs
  • s(x) and c(x)
  • High-x parton distribution functions
  • Nuclear Effects
  • Spin-dependent parton distribution functions
  • Generalized Parton Distributions

11
State of our Knowledge at start of FPD - Time
SnapshotAssume following experiments complete
  • K2K - 12 GeV protons
  • MiniBooNE - 8 GeV protons
  • MINERnA (Running parasitically to MINOS) - 120
    GeV protons
  • HARP, BNL E910, MIPP (E907) - Associated
    experiments to help flux determination
  • Jlab - High precision elastic scattering to help
    QE analysis
  • T2K-I (no input as to scattering physics
    expectations)
  • FINeSSE

12
Completed experiments by FPD-time
Main physics channels quasi-elastic, resonant
and coherent 1-p production May also have a
reasonable n sample of the above channels
Main physics channels quasi-elastic, Resonant
and coherent 1-p, and low-W, multi- p channels
En (GeV)
13
MINERnAMI -120 GeV Protons
Move target only
C, Fe and Pb Nuclear targets
  • Main Physics Topics with Expected Produced
    Statistics
  • Quasi-elastic 300 K events off 3 tons CH
  • Resonance Production 600 K total, 450 K 1p
  • Coherent Pion Production 25 K CC / 12.5 K NC
  • Nuclear Effects C0.6M, Fe 1M and Pb 1 M
  • DIS and Structure Functions 2.8 M total /1.2 M
    DIS event
  • Strange and Charm Particle Production gt 60 K
    fully reconstructed events
  • Generalized Parton Distributions few K
    events

14
(Quasi)-elastic Scattering
  • Dominant reaction up to 1 GeV energy
  • Essential for E? measurement in K2K/T2K
  • The well-measured reaction
  • Uncertain to only 20 or so for neutrinos
  • Worse in important threshold region and for
    anti-neutrinos
  • Axial form-factor not accessible to electron
    scattering
  • Essential to modeling q2 distribution
  • Recoil proton reconstruction requires
    fine-grained design - impractical for oscillation
    detectors
  • Recent work focuses on non-dipole form-factors,
    non-zero GnE measurements

Current status
15
Neutrino Scattering 8 GeV Proton Driver - Rex
Tayloe Future Wednesday talk for details
- NC elastic scattering - A measurement of NC
elastic scattering is sensitive to axial,
isoscalar component of proton
(strange quark contribution to proton spin, Ds)
- Ratio of NC/CC reduces systematics - proton
driver would enable this measurement with n
- and perhaps (with high intensity) measurement
on nucleon targets (H/D) allowing elimination of
nuclear structure errors.
- n e elastic scattering - sensitive to n
magnetic moment gt new physics - measured by
low-Ee recoil energy behavior - rates are low!
Require highest-intensity beam.
FINeSSE could give us a first look at these topics
16
MINER?A CC Quasi-Elastic MeasurementsFully
simulated analysis, including realistic detector
simulation and reconstruction
Average eff. 74 and purity 77
Expected MiniBooNE and K2K measurements
We will understand n - nucleus elastic scattering
by the time of FPD. Except for possible
MiniBooNe, low E sample, we will NOT have elastic
n -nucleus and certainly not n / n - nucleon
as well
17
Coherent Pion Production
  • Characterized by a small energy transfer to the
    nucleus, forward going p. NC (p0 production)
    significant background for nm --gt ne oscillation
    search.
  • Data has not been precise enough to discriminate
    between several very different models.
  • K2K, with their SciBar detector, and MiniBooNE
    will attempt to explicitly measure this channel -
    important low En measurement
  • Expect 25K events and roughly (30-40) detection
    efficiency with MINERnA.
  • Can also study A-dependence with MINERnA

18
MINERnA Coherent Pion Production 25 K CC / 12.5
K NC events off C - 8.3 K CC/ 4.2 K NC off Fe and
Pb
Rein-Seghal
Paschos- Kartavtsev
We will understand n coherent scattering well by
the time of FPD. Except for a possible
MiniBooNe low E sample, we will NOT have measured
n - coherent scattering.
MINERnA
Expected MiniBooNE and K2K measurements
19
Parton Distribution FunctionsCTEQ uncertainties
in u and d quark fits
20
DIS Parton Distribution Functions Ability of n
to taste different quarks allows isolation of
flavors
n/ n - Proton Scattering
At high x
No messy nuclear corrections!
F2np - xF3np 4xu
F2np xF3np 4xu
EPP and NP interest in PDFs Need n and p/n target
21
Nuclear Effects - studied only with charged
leptons
S. Kumano
Fermi motion
valence-quark
original EMC finding
antiquark
shadowing
x
sea quark
valence quark
EXPECTED to be different for n!!
22
Difference between n-A and m-A nuclear
effectsSergey Kulagin
Need significant n statistics to fully understand
nuclear effects with the weak current
23
What will we need beyond MiniBooNE, K2K and
MINERnA for neutrino scattering at FPD?
  • HIGH-STATISTICS ANTINEUTRINO EXPOSURE
  • Need to improve purity of n beam?
  • HYDROGEN AND DEUTERIUM TARGET FOR n and n
  • Need reasonable event rates at E 1 GEV
  • NARROW BAND BEAM FOR DETAILED LOOK AT NC
  • Is off-axis beam sufficiently narrow?
  • IMPROVED DETECTOR TECHNIQUES
  • Particularly good neutron detection for n
  • Need a fully-active detector for H2 and D2
    exposures

24
Need a Very Efficient n Beam
Low energy NuMI n beam yields around 1.1 n
events for every n event!
  • Resulting beam is almost pure n beam
  • in n mode 4 x 10-3
  • Loose factor five in intensity compared to NuMI
    factor 3.5 compared to n

25
Need a large H2/D2 target
An efficient fully-active CCD coupled tracking
detector Bubble Chamber A Chicago - Fermilab
collaboration developing Contemporary large BC
design/construction/operation Techniques
including CCD readout
BC Placed in the upstream part of MINERnA
H_2/D_2
26
Summary
  • At the completion of MiniBooNE, K2K and the
    MINERnA parasitic run we will have reasonable
    results for neutrino-nucleus interactions
    including exclusive cross-sections, form factors
    and nuclear effects.
  • We will need the FPD, with both an 8 GeV (proton)
    and 120 GeV (proton) neutrino program, to have
    similarly reasonable results for
  • n -nucleus cross-sections,
  • n and n - proton and neutron (D2) cross-sections,
  • n / n - e elastic scattering
  • high-statistics narrow-band studies of NC (and
    CC) channels.
  • There is considerable work to be done in
    detailing the neutrino scattering program at the
    FPD. Your participation is most welcome.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com