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Neutrino mass hierarchy and 13 Determination by Remote Detection of Reactor Antineutrinos. Mikhail Batygov, On behalf of UH Hanohano group, September 14, Sendai TAUP 2007. Outline. Neutrino oscillation parameters Current knowledge Parameters to be estimated at higher accuracy Methods
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Neutrino mass hierarchy and 13 Determination by Remote Detection of Reactor Antineutrinos Mikhail Batygov, On behalf of UH Hanohano group, September 14, Sendai TAUP 2007
Outline • Neutrino oscillation parameters • Current knowledge • Parameters to be estimated at higher accuracy • Methods • Requirements and the Hanohano project • Other physics goals • Current status and conclusion
Oscillation Parameters: present • KamLAND (with SNO) analysis: tan2(θ12)=0.40(+0.10/–0.07) Δm221=(7.9+0.4/-0.35)×10-5 eV2 Araki et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 94 (2005) 081801. (UPDATED: talk by I. Shimizu at this conference) • SuperK and K2K: Δm231=(2.5±0.5)×10-3 eV2 Ashie et al., Phys. Rev. D64 (2005) 112005 Aliu et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 94 (2005) 081802 • CHOOZ limit: sin2(2θ13) ≤ 0.20 Apollonio et al., Eur. Phys. J. C27 (2003) 331-374.
Oscillation parameters to be measured 2 mass diffs, 3 angles, 1 CP phase • Precision measurement of mixing parameters needed • World effort to determine θ13 (=θ31) • Determination of mass hierarchy
3- mixing Pee=1-{ cos4(θ13) sin2(2θ12) [1-cos(Δm212L/2E)] + cos2(θ12) sin2(2θ13) [1-cos(Δm213L/2E)] + sin2(θ12) sin2(2θ13) [1-cos(Δm223L/2E)]}/2 • Survival probability: 3 oscillating terms each cycling in L/E space (~t) with own “periodicity” (Δm2~ω) • Amplitude ratios ~13.5 : 2.5 : 1.0 • Oscillation lengths ~110 km (Δm212) and ~4 km (Δm213~Δm223) at reactor peak ~3.5 MeV Two possible approaches: • ½-cycle measurements can yield • Mixing angles, mass-squared differences • Less statistical uncertainty for same parameter and detector • Multi-cycle measurements can yield • Mixing angles, precise mass-squared differences • Mass hierarchy • Less sensitivity to systematic errors
12 precise measurement • Reactor experiment- νe point source • P(νe→νe)≈1-sin2(2θ12)sin2(Δm221L/4E) • 60 GW·kt·y exposure at 50-70 km • ~4% systematic error from near detector • sin2(θ12) measured with ~2% uncertainty Ideal spot Bandyopadhyay et al., Phys. Rev. D67 (2003) 113011. Minakata et al., hep-ph/0407326 Bandyopadhyay et al., hep-ph/0410283
3-flavor oscillations • “High-frequency” amplitude is 13 • In L/E plot, a purely sinusoidal factor • Invites the use of Fourier Transform for analysis
Fourier Transformed Spectrum • The size of the peak proportional to 13. • The peak’s asymmetry tells about hierarchy • Method developed at UH Δm232 < Δm231 normalhierarchy 0.0025 eV2 peak due to nonzero θ13 Preliminary- 50 kt-y exposure at 50 km range sin2(2θ13)≥0.02 Δm231=0.0025 eV2 to 1% level Learned, Dye,Pakvasa, Svoboda hep-ex/0612022 Includes energy smearing
Hierarchy Discrimination • Uses the difference in spectra • Efficiency depends heavily on energy resolution Perfect E resolution E = 6%*sqrt(Evis) E, MeV E, MeV
Estimation of the statistical significance • Thousands of events necessary for reliable discrimination, even at 1 CL • Longer baselines more sensitive to energy resolution; may be beneficial to adjust for actual detector performance Neutrino events to 1 CL < 3%: desirable but maybe unrealistic E resolution KamLAND: 0.065 MeV0.5 Detector energy resolution, MeV0.5
Additional goal: neutrino geophysics • Antineutrinos produced in -decays of 232Th and 238U decay series isotopes • A substantial (but not known precisely) part of Earth heat flux of 40 (31) TW • In continent-based detectors, flux dominated by continental crust • Ocean-based detectors allow to measure geo-neutrino flux from mantle
Requirements • Baseline on the order of 50 km; better variable for different studies • Big number of events (large detector) • For Hierarchy: • Good to excellent energy resolution • sin2(213) 0 • No full or nearly full mixing in 12 (almost assured by SNO and KamLAND) • For Geo-neutrinos: ability to “switch off” reactor background
MeV-Scale Electron Anti-Neutrino Detection Key: 2 flashes, close in space and time, 2nd of known energy, eliminate background Production in reactors and natural decays Detection Evis=Eν-0.8 MeV prompt delayed Evis=2.2 MeV • Standard inverse β-decay coincidence • Eν > 1.8 MeV • Rate and precise spectrum but no direction Reines & Cowan
Hanohano detector • 10-kt LS detector • Primary detection method: inverse-beta decay • Ocean-based, with 2 key advantages: • Adjustable baseline • Ability to avoid reactor background in the geo-neutrino studies Barge 112 m long x 23.3 wide
Additional Physics/AstrophysicsHanohano will be biggest low energy neutrino detector • Nucleon Decay: (SUSY-favored kaon modes may be also possible) • Supernova Detection: special νe ability • Relic SN Neutrinos • GRBs and other rare impulsive sources • Long list of ancillary, non-interfering science, with strong discovery potential
Current status • Several workshops held (’04, ’05, ’06) and ideas developed • Study funds provided preliminary engineering and physics feasibility report (11/06) • Strongly growing interest in geology community • Work proceeding and collaboration in formation • Upcoming workshops in Washington DC (10/07) and Paris (12/07) for reactor monitoring • Funding request for next stage (’06) in motion • Ancillary proposals and computer studies continue
Summary • Better precision for sin2(212) and sin2(213) along with the determination of hierarchy possible for reactor-based antineutrino experiment • Variable baseline desirable • particular measurements require individual tuning • optimal placement dependent on unknown parameters • minimize systematic errors (esp. in energy scale) • Needs large statistics → big detector • Requires precise e energy measurement Hanohano designed to meet those goals and also provides: • Unique sensitivity to mantle geo-neutrinos • Ability to avoid reactor background when needed • Additional physics measurements achievable to higher precision