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Hanohano. Mikhail Batygov, University of Hawaii. Brookhaven, UDiG workshop, October 17, 2008. Overview of the project goals. Main goals of the project Fundamental physics, esp. oscillation studies Terrestrial antineutrinos Special advantages Reduced sensitivity to systematics
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Hanohano Mikhail Batygov, University of Hawaii. Brookhaven, UDiG workshop, October 17, 2008
Overview of the project goals • Main goals of the project • Fundamental physics, esp. oscillation studies • Terrestrial antineutrinos • Special advantages • Reduced sensitivity to systematics • Combination of big size and low energy threshold • Variable baseline option • Additional studies • Nucleon decay, possibly incl. SUSY favored kaon mode • Supernova detection • Relic SN neutrinos • Demonstration of remote reactor monitoring • Special interest for nuclear non-proliferation
Oscillation Parameters: present • KamLAND (with SNO) analysis: sin2(θ12)=0.82±0.4 Δm221=(7.6±0.2)×10-5 eV2 SuperK, K2K, MINOS: Δm2atm=(2.41±0.13)×10-3 eV2 CHOOZ limit: sin2(2θ13) ≤ 0.20
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 exposure • Multi-cycle measurements can yield • Mixing angles, precise mass-squared differences • Mass hierarchy • Less sensitive to systematic errors
Origin of geo-neutrinos Two types of crust: Oceanic & Continental • Generated in -decays of radioactive isotopes from 238U and 232Th decay series • Crust believed to be the primary source of geo-neutrinos for land-based experiments Oceanic crust: single stage melting of the mantle Continental crust: multi-stage melting processes Compositionally distinct
Predicted Geoneutrino Flux Continental detectors dominated by continental crust geo-neutrinos Oceanic detectors can probe the U/Th contents of the mantle Reactor Flux - irreducible background Geoneutrino flux determinations -continental (DUSEL, SNO+, LENA) -oceanic (Hanohano)
Hanohano: engineering studies Makai Ocean Engineering • Studied vessel design up to 100 kilotons, based upon cost, stability, and construction ease. • Construct in shipyard • Fill/test in port • Tow to site, can traverse Panama Canal • Deploy ~4-5 km depth • Recover, repair or relocate, and redeploy Barge 112 m long x 23.3 wide For oscillation 2 possible locations: near Taiwan and near California Deployment Sketch Descent/ascent 39 min
Expected performance in oscillation studies • Systematic uncertainties were considered • Effect of geo-neutrino background taken into account (turned out greater than expected!) • Goals • Study expected sensitivities to measurable oscillation parameters • Determine optimal baselines • Formulate technical requirements to the detector • Study carried out with Hanohano in mind but results applicable to any similar experiment, ocean-based or land-based
Simulation assumptions • Detector size: about 10 kT of LS • Detector energy resolution: 2.5%sqrt(Evis) • State of the art by today’s standards but possible; work is in progress at UHM • Terrestrial antineutrino flow: about 30 TNU but not known exactly (unconstrained) • Detector systematics: • 2% in expected event rate • 8% in energy resolution estimation • 1% in “linear” energy scale uncertainty
Expected sensitivity to “solar” oscillation parameters sin2212 m212 • Geo-neutrinos are an issue • Not sensitive to detector resolution and systematics • Can achieve 0.01 accuracy in sin2212 in ~300 GWtkTy • Can achieve 1% in m212 in ~300 GWtkTy “pessimistic: systematics unconstrained” default systematics “optimistic”: no detector systematics no systematics, no geo-
Expected sensitivity to 13 • Moderately sensitive to resolution (more for longer baselines) and systematics (more for shorter baselines) • Geo-neutrinos not an issue • Target sensitivity 0.02 in sin2213 and will probably be exceeded in 300 GWtkTy • Optimum baselines < 30 km “pessimistic: systematics unconstrained” default systematics “optimistic”: no detector systematics no systematics, no geo-
Expected sensitivity to m212 and m213 “pessimistic: systematics unconstrained” • Very demanding of detector energy resolution • Two families of solutions, for each hierarchy respectively, one somewhat favored over another • Sensitivity depends on sin2213 • Optimum baselines ~< 30 km default systematics “optimistic”: no detector systematics no systematics, no geo- Note: for sin2213=0.05
Expected sensitivity to mass hierarchy “pessimistic: systematics unconstrained” • Extremely demanding of detector resolution • Success depends on the actual value of 13; unlikely to achieve considerable CL if sin2213 less than 0.05 • Optimum baselines ~50 km default systematics “optimistic”: no detector systematics no systematics, no geo- Note: for sin2213=0.05 Note: for sin2213=0.05
Conclusions • No oscillation studies appear to be systematically constrained at medium baselines • Multi-baseline exposure offers better overall performance; Hanohano can take advantage of its movability; land-based experiment would be better suited with several smaller detectors at different baselines • Geo-neutrinos are a handicap for solar parameter measurement • Useful estimations of geo-neutrino flux can still be performed even in the presence of reactor background • Big underwater detector offers real opportunity to measure in 300 GWtkTy: • Solar parameters to 1% (currently – 3-5%) • sin2213 to 2% (competitive with dedicated experiments but complimentary due to being constrained statistically rather than systematically) • Atmospheric m2: depends on sin2213 but may be below 1% if sin2213 > 0.05 • Mass hierarchy: unlikely unless sin2213 > 0.05 but may be possible with bigger multi-baseline setups