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Braidwood Neutrino Experiment

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Title: Braidwood Neutrino Experiment


1
Braidwood Neutrino Experiment
  • Introduction and Motivation
  • Collaboration
  • Project Description
  • Physics Capabilities
  • Status, Schedule, and Summary

M. Shaevitz Columbia UniversityPresentation at
the NuSAG MeetingJune 1, 2005
2
Braidwood Introduction (Motivated By
Theoretical and Experimental Requirements)
  • Sensitivity (90 CL) down to sin22q13 0.005
  • Discovery potential (3s) for sin22q13 gt 0.01
  • Convincing results
  • Observation of an oscillation signal in both
    counting and energy shape measurement
  • Cross checks on systematic uncertainties
  • In situ measurements of backgrounds and
    efficiencies
  • To meet these goals requires a near/far
    experimental setup with the same overburden
    shielding along with multiple large detectors at
    each site

3
Motivation
Reactor Exp. Best for Determining q13
Reactor Can Lift q23 Degeneracy (Example sin22
?23 0.95 ? 0.01)
?m2 2.510-3 eV2 sin22q13 0.05
McConnel /Shaevitzhep-ex/0409028
90 CL
90 CL
?m2 2.510-3 eV2 sin22q13 0.05
  • Other Guidance
  • In many models, q13 could be very small ?
    sin22q13 lt 0.01 seems to be a dividing level for
    both theory and exp.
  • Such a low level might imply a new underlying
    symmetry or change in theory paradigm
  • Longer baseline experiments needed
  • Measuring the full set of mixing parameters (q12,
    q13, q23, and d) is needed for addressing
    quark-lepton unification models.

Far future Precision Osc. Parameter
Measurements
90 CL
(Add Braidwood)
4
Braidwood Neutrino Collaboration
14 Institutions 70 Collaborators
5
Exelon Corporation also a Collaborator
  • Enthusiastic and very supportive of the project
  • Exelon Vice President has sent letter of support
    to funding agencies
  • Security and site access issues not a problem
  • Have helped us with bore holes at near/far
    locations
  • Example and proof of principle for us doing civil
    construction on site

6
Collaboration Organization
  • Co-Spokepersons (Ed
    Blucher and Mike Shaevitz)
  • Background and Simulation (Group leaders Tim
    Bolton and Matt Worcester)
  • Calibration (Group leader Josh Klein)
  • Veto System (Group leader Peter Fisher)
  • Electronics (Group leader Jim Pilcher)
  • Detector mechanical engineering (Group leader
    Maury Goodman)
  • Site and civil construction (Group leader Jon
    Link)
  • Liquid Scintillator (Group leader Dick Hahn)
  • Non-q13 physics (Group leaders Janet Conrad,
    Joe Formaggio)
  • Management and Oversight (Group Leader Ray
    Stefanski)
  • Education Outreach
    (Group Leader Paul Nienaber)

7
Reactor Measurements of ?13
  • Nuclear reactors are very intense sources of??e
    with a well understood spectrum
  • 3 GW ? 61020?ne/s700 events / yr / ton at 1500
    m away
  • Reactor spectrum peaks at 3.7 MeV
  • Oscillation Max. for Dm22.5?10-3 eV2 at L near
    1500 m
  • Disappearance Measurement Look for small rate
    deviation from 1/r2 measured at near and far
    baselines
  • Counting Experiment
  • Compare events in near and far detector
  • Energy Shape Experiment
  • Compare energy spectrum in near and far detector

8
Experimental Setup
  • The reaction process is inverse ß-decay (IBD)
    followed by neutron capture
  • Two part coincidence signal is crucial for
    background reduction.
  • Positron energy spectrum implies the neutrino
    spectrum
  • The scintillator will be doped with gadolinium to
    enhance capture

Liquid Scintillatorwith Gadolinium
Shielding
E? Evis 1.8 MeV 2me
n mGd ? m1Gd gs (8 MeV)
6 meters
Signal Positron signal Neutron signal within
100 msec (5 capture times)
9
Experimental Challenges for Multi-Detector
Disappearance Exps
  • Relative Detector Uncertainties
  • Fiducial VolumeAcceptance
  • Energy scale and linearity
  • Deadtime
  • Backgrounds to the e - n coincidence signal
  • Uncorrelated Backgrounds
  • ambient radioactivity
  • accidentals
  • cosmogenic neutrons
  • Correlated Backgrounds
  • cosmic rays induce neutrons in the surrounding
    rock and buffer region of the detector
  • cosmogenic radioactive nuclei that emit delayed
    neutrons in the detector
  • eg. 8He (T1/2119ms)
  • 9Li (T1/2178ms)

12B mainly
Assume Kamlandradio-isotopeconcentration
10
BraidwoodNeutrino Experiment
  • Braidwood Setup
  • Two 3.6 GW reactors
  • Two 65 ton (fid vol) near detectors at 270 m
  • Two 65 ton (fid vol) far detectors at 1510 m
  • 180m shafts and detector halls at 450 mwe
    depth

Project Summary - Overview - Civil
Construction - Detector Design -
Backgrounds and Veto System - Physics
Capability
11
Braidwood Design Principles
  • Compare rate/shape in identical, large,
    spherical, on-axis detectors at two distances
    that have equal overburden shielding(Multiple
    detectors at each site two near and two far)?
    Systematic uncertainties cancel to first order
    and only have uncertainties for second
    order effects
  • Detectors filled simultaneously with common
    scintillator on surface
  • Large (65 ton fiducial) detectors give large data
    samples
  • Spherical detectors reduce any geometrical
    effects from neutrino direction and
    reconstruction
  • On-axis detectors eliminate any dependence on
    reactor power variations in a multi-reactor
    setup.
  • Equal overburden shielding gives equal spallation
    rates in near and far that can be exploited for
    detector and background checks

12
Braidwood Design Sensitivity
  • Experiment designed to have
  • Discovery potential (at 3s) for sin22q13 gt 0.01
    and
  • Sensitivity (90 CL) down to the sin22q13 0.005
    level ? With cross checks and redundancy to
    substantiate results
  • See signal in both total rate and energy shape
    measurements
  • Cross calibrate detector pairs at high-rate near
    site
  • Cross calibrate near/far detectors using
    spallation isotopes like 12B (since detectors at
    same deep depth)
  • Multiple near and far detectors give direct cross
    checks on detector systematics at 0.05 for the
    near set and 0.3 for far
  • Large detectors allow studies of the radial
    dependence of the IBD signal and backgrounds.

13
Overview of Braidwood Uncertainties
  • Primary uncertainties associated with predicting
    the relative near-to-far event ratio
  • This combined with the statistical and background
    uncertainties leads to the final sensitivity

With two near and two far detectors, this leads
to a total uncertainty in the Near/far ratio of
0.33
14
Civil Construction
  • Two detector locations at 200 m and 1500 m from
    the reactors
  • A 10 m diameter shaft allows access to the
    detector caverns at 183 m below the surface
  • Caverns are 12m x 14m x 32m and house two
    detectors with their veto systems
  • Detailed cost estimates were done by the Hilton
    and Associates engineering firm.
  • Total cost 29M 5M (EDIA) 8.5M
    (Contingency)
  • (Shafts 2_at_9.8M, Caverns 2_at_2.4M, Tunnels
    1.7M, and 3.2M mobilization)

15
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16
Bore Hole Project at the Exelon Site
  • Bore hole project completed in January 2005
  • Bore holes drilled to full depth (200m) at near
    and far shaft positions on Braidwood site.
  • Provided detailed information on geology, ground
    water, radioactivity, etc.
  • Confirmed feasibility of detectors down to
    depths of 460mwe.
  • Reduces contingency required for underground
    construction
  • Demonstrated willingness of Exelon to allow
    construction on their site.

17
Movable Detectors
  • Transport is necessary to move detectors from
    construction/filling area to below ground halls
  • Cost estimate is 250K for one movement campaign
    (2 to 3 campaigns envisaged)
  • Only minimal moving required for cross checks
  • Example scenario
  • Possible method Use climbing jack system with
    cable to lift and put units on multi-wheeled
    trailer (standard method used in industry for
    such projects.)

A
B
A
B
C
D
A
C
B
D
Goldhofer Trailer Moving 400 tons
18
Detector Design and Engineering
  • Engineering by Argonne, Fermilab and Bartoszek
    Associates
  • Baseline design has
  • Outer steel buffer oil containment vessel (7m
    diameter)
  • 1000 low activity glass 8 PMTs evenly
    distributed on inside surface (25 coverage)
  • Inner acrylic Gd-Scint containment vessel (5.2m
    diameter)
  • Top access port can be used to insert
    calibration sources

19
Detector Design and Optimization
  • Detectors and analysis strategy designed to
    minimize relative acceptance differences
  • 2 zone detector design Central zone (r2.6m)
    with Gd-loaded scintillator
  • (0.2 by weight) surrounded by mineral oil buffer
    region (r3.5m).
  • Neutrino detection by
  • Fiducial mass determined by volume of Gd-loaded
    scintillator.
  • Event selection based on coincidence of e
    signal (Evisgt0.5 MeV) and ?s released from nGd
    capture (Evisgt6 MeV). No explicit requirement on
    reconstructed event position little sensitivity
    to E requirements.

20
2 Zone Detector Design
  • 2 zone design offers simpler construction,
  • optics, and source calibration, as well as
  • larger fiducial mass for a given detector
  • volume.
  • Large (r 3.5 m) detector reduces surface
  • area to volume ratio, significantly reducing
  • sensitivity to energy scale.
  • Use neutron capture peaks from IBD events
  • to measure energy scale.
  • In each far detector, E scale can be measured to
    0.3 every 5 days. (This calibration averages
    over detector in exactly the same way as signal
    events.)
  • Acceptance uncertainty from energy scale
  • in 2-zone design should be 0.1.

21
Gd - Liquid Scintillator (Gd-LS)
  • BNL Nuclear Chemistry group is developing
    Gd-loaded liquid scintillator for Braidwood
    experiment.
  • We plan to use 0.2 Gd PC dodecane mixture.
  • Long-term stability tests in progress
  • So far, stable with attenuation length gt 18 m.

Stability of Gd-LS (Absorbance of 0.002
corresponds to attenuation Length of 20 m).
BNL Measurements
6 months
22
  • Detector Cost Estimate
  • 4.2 M /detectorwith veto system 1.3M (Cont.)
  • Other detector related items1M with cont.
  • Total for 4 detectors 23M with cont.

23
Backgrounds
  • Backgrounds are important since the
    signal/background ratios in the near and far
    detectors are different.
  • Uncorrelated backgrounds from random coincidences
    are not a problem
  • Reduced by limiting radioactive materials
  • Limestone rock at Braidwood site has low
    radioactivity wrt granite
  • Directly measured from rates and random trigger
    setups
  • Correlated backgrounds from
  • Neutrons that mimic the coincidence signal
  • Cosmogenically produced isotopes that decay to a
    beta and neutron (9Li and 8He)
  • Veto system is the prime tool for
    tagging/eliminating and measuring the rate of
    these coincidence backgrounds

24
Cosmic Muon Rates at Braidwood Depths
  • Calculation of muon rate at 464 mwe (600 ft)
  • Incorporate data from boreholes for density and
    material
  • Average muon flux 0.213 /m2/sec
  • Average muon energy 110.1 GeV

25
Veto (Tagging) System
  • Veto system being designed using GEANT4 hit level
    simulation tools
  • Goal lt 1 neutron background event/day/detector
  • Measure muon trajectory and/or energy deposition
    in surrounding material
  • Composed of active detectors and shielding
  • Mechanical construction needs to
  • Be modular for assembly
  • Have access to top port
  • Allow detector to be installed and moved
  • Requirements of veto system
  • Identify muons which could give neutron/isotope
    background in the fiducial region
  • Absorb neutrons produced by muons that miss the
    veto
  • Muon identification must allow in situ
    determination of the residual background rate.

26
Detector With Moveable Veto System and Shielding
27
Background Calculations
  • For a veto system with 2 mwe of shielding, both
    a GEANT4 and a MARS calculation give
  • 170 n/ton/day produced in the surrounding rock
  • 4500 n/day emerging from the rock
  • A background rate of 0.2 to 0.7 events/
    dayafter the veto requirements.
  • Costs for system consistent with initial
    estimates

Neutrons that reach the vessel wall
Fraction of Neutrons
Detector
Untaggedneutrons
28
Using Isotope Production to Measure Fiducial Mass
  • Unique feature of the Braidwood set up
  • Near and Far detectors at equal well-understood
    overburden
  • Near and Far detectors have substantial
    shielding? Can use produced 12B events to
    measure
  • Near/far relative target mass from the total rate
  • Near/far energy calibrations from the relative
    energy distribution
  • 50,000 12B beta-decay events per year per
    detector can be tagged and isolated for a
    statistical uncertainty of 0.45
  • Systematic uncertainties related to the relative
    near/far overburden that needs to be known to few
    percent from
  • Geological survey information (Bore hole data
    near/far agreement at lt1)
  • Cosmic muon rates in the near and far locations

29
Simulations and Sensitivity Estimates
  • Studies using hit level Monte Carlos to determine
    signal efficiencies, resolutions, and background
    rates
  • Uses a combination of parameterized and full
    GEANT4 detector simulation tools
  • Estimates of calibration and construction
    procedures used to set the scale of uncertainties
    in relative energy scale/offset as well as
    relative fiducial mass
  • Reconstructed Energy Cuts
  • positron Evis gt 0.5 MeV
  • n-Gd capture Evis gt 6 MeV

30
Sensitivity Estimates
  • The oscillation search is made by comparing the
    events in the near and far detectors using
  • Total number of events integrated over energy
    (Counting Meas.)
  • The distribution of events binned in energy
    (Shape Meas.)
  • Both counting plus shape ( Combined Meas.)
  • Systematic uncertainties associated with the near
    to far event or energy spectrum are included as
    outlined in the table below

31
90 CL Sensitivity vs Years of Data
  • Information from both counting and shape fits
  • Combined sensitivity for sin22q13 reaches the
    0.005 level after three years

32
Sensitivity and Discovery Potential
  • For three years of Braidwood dataand Dm2 gt 2.5 x
    10-3 eV2
  • 90 CL limit at sin22q13 lt 0.005
  • 3 s discovery for sin22q13 gt 0.013

33
Braidwood Measurement Capability
  • For 3 years of data and a combined counting plus
    shape analysis
  • Dm2 2.5 x 10-3 eV2 and sin22q13 0.02

34
Other Physics Neutrino Electroweak Couplings
  • At Braidwood can isolate about 10,000?ne e
    events that will allow the measurement of the
    neutrino gL2 coupling to 1
  • This is ?4 better than past n-e experiments and
    would give an error comparable to gL2(NuTeV)
    0.3001 ? 0.0014

gL2 - gL2(SM)
  • Precision measurement possible since
  • Measure elastic scattering relative to inverse
    beta decay (making this a ratio, not an
    absolute, measurement)
  • Can pick a smart visible energy window (3-5 MeV)
    away from background

35
Braidwood Elastic Scattering Measurement
  • Aims to be the most precise measurement of
    neutrino-electron scattering
  • Preliminary investigations indicate systematics
    can be controlled at the 1 level
  • Continuing study to ameliorate systematic errors
    and identify any gaps in our understanding of the
    measurement.

36
Braidwood Status and Schedule
  • Engineering / RD Proposal (1M) submitted in
    Nov. 2004
  • Need this funding to complete the engineering for
    a proposal
  • Develop a Design and Build package for civil
    construction
  • Complete detector design at the bid package level
  • Complete and set up management plan and project
    oversight
  • Complete the development of the Gd-Scint and
    provide test batches for prototypes
  • Baseline Cost Estimate
  • Civil Costs 34M 8.5M (Cont.)
  • 4 Detectors and Veto Systems
    18M 5M (Cont.)
  • Schedule
  • 2004 RD proposal submission.
  • 2004 Bore hole project completed on Braidwood
    site.
  • 2005 First NuSAG review
  • 2006 Full proposal submission
  • 2007 Project approval start construction
  • 2010 Start data collection

37
The Value of Building a Reactor Experiment in the
US
  • Local Investment both within and outside of
    physics.
  • High US Participation in the operations since
    the travel costs are low.
  • More US undergrad and grad student participation
    possible
  • 4) Support of near-by, well-established
    laboratories.
  • More direct and local control of management
  • Opportunities for education and outreach for the
    general public, schools, and universities.

38
Summary
  • Braidwood is an ideal location for an experiment
    in the US to measure q13
  • Flat overburden with deep, on-site locations for
    near and far detectors
  • Equal overburden for near/far stations allows
    cross checks
  • Close proximity to the neutrino corridor of
    Fermilab and Argonne
  • Cooperative reactor company with a high power
    facility
  • Capability to do additional physics with the near
    detector
  • Strong collaboration which is making rapid
    progress in developing a robust experiment with
    excellent sensitivity
  • Sensitivity (90 CL) down to sin22q13 0.005
  • Discovery potential (3s) for sin22q13 gt 0.01
  • Engineering/RD support and funding at this point
    is crucial
  • Need 100K soon to prepare an improved
    design/cost estimate in anticipation of P5 etc.
    and to continue the scintillator development
  • Need the full funding in timely fashion as
    outlined in our Engineering/RD proposal (1M) to
    prepare the final proposal and engineering
    packages.

39
Backups and Other Slides
40
Experiment Setup and Rates
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