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Possible Origin Of The Neutrino Speed Anomaly Reported By OPERA

Recently the OPERA collaboration reported a measurement of a superluminal speed of muon neutrinos travelling through the Earth's crust between their production site at CERN and their detection site under Gran Sasso, ~730 km away. The measurement was based on the assumption that the pulse shape...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Dado, Shlomo, Dar, Arnon
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/1394539
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author Dado, Shlomo
Dar, Arnon
author_facet Dado, Shlomo
Dar, Arnon
author_sort Dado, Shlomo
collection CERN
description Recently the OPERA collaboration reported a measurement of a superluminal speed of muon neutrinos travelling through the Earth's crust between their production site at CERN and their detection site under Gran Sasso, ~730 km away. The measurement was based on the assumption that the pulse shape of the neutrinos from the decay of parent mesons produced in proton-target collisions is the same as that of the incident protons. Here we argue that the effective column density of the target along the beam direction decreases with time during the 10.5 microseconds duration of the proton pulse. This is because of the thermal expansion and expulsion of target material along the beam by the energy-momentum deposition during the 10.5 microseconds pulse. The progresive reduction in the effective column density during the pulse decreases the neutrino production rate per incident proton. It could have advanced the mean production time of the detected neutrinos relative to that calculated from the proton pulse-shape, by an amount comparable to the measured neutrino lead time (60.7+/-6.9(stat) +/-7.4(sys) ns. This explanation implies that the planned measurements by OPERA of the speed of neutrinos produced in much shorter (a few ns) pulses, should yield a speed consistent with the speed of light in free space.
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spelling cern-13945392019-09-30T06:29:59Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/1394539engDado, ShlomoDar, ArnonPossible Origin Of The Neutrino Speed Anomaly Reported By OPERAParticle Physics - ExperimentRecently the OPERA collaboration reported a measurement of a superluminal speed of muon neutrinos travelling through the Earth's crust between their production site at CERN and their detection site under Gran Sasso, ~730 km away. The measurement was based on the assumption that the pulse shape of the neutrinos from the decay of parent mesons produced in proton-target collisions is the same as that of the incident protons. Here we argue that the effective column density of the target along the beam direction decreases with time during the 10.5 microseconds duration of the proton pulse. This is because of the thermal expansion and expulsion of target material along the beam by the energy-momentum deposition during the 10.5 microseconds pulse. The progresive reduction in the effective column density during the pulse decreases the neutrino production rate per incident proton. It could have advanced the mean production time of the detected neutrinos relative to that calculated from the proton pulse-shape, by an amount comparable to the measured neutrino lead time (60.7+/-6.9(stat) +/-7.4(sys) ns. This explanation implies that the planned measurements by OPERA of the speed of neutrinos produced in much shorter (a few ns) pulses, should yield a speed consistent with the speed of light in free space.Recently the OPERA collaboration reported a measurement of a superluminal speed of muon neutrinos travelling through the Earth's crust between their production site at CERN and their detection site under Gran Sasso, ~730 km away. The measurement was based on the assumption that the pulse shape of the neutrinos from the decay of parent mesons produced in proton-target collisions is the same as that of the incident protons. Here we argue that the effective column density of the target along the beam direction decreases with time during the 10.5 microseconds duration of the proton pulse. This is because of the thermal expansion and expulsion of target material along the beam by the energy-momentum deposition during the 10.5 microseconds pulse. The progresive reduction in the effective column density during the pulse decreases the neutrino production rate per incident proton. It could have advanced the mean production time of the detected neutrinos relative to that calculated from the proton pulse-shape, by an amount comparable to the measured neutrino lead time (60.7+/-6.9(stat) +/-7.4(sys) ns. This explanation implies that the planned measurements by OPERA of the speed of neutrinos produced in much shorter (a few ns) pulses, should yield a speed consistent with the speed of light in free space.arXiv:1110.6408oai:cds.cern.ch:13945392011-10-31
spellingShingle Particle Physics - Experiment
Dado, Shlomo
Dar, Arnon
Possible Origin Of The Neutrino Speed Anomaly Reported By OPERA
title Possible Origin Of The Neutrino Speed Anomaly Reported By OPERA
title_full Possible Origin Of The Neutrino Speed Anomaly Reported By OPERA
title_fullStr Possible Origin Of The Neutrino Speed Anomaly Reported By OPERA
title_full_unstemmed Possible Origin Of The Neutrino Speed Anomaly Reported By OPERA
title_short Possible Origin Of The Neutrino Speed Anomaly Reported By OPERA
title_sort possible origin of the neutrino speed anomaly reported by opera
topic Particle Physics - Experiment
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/1394539
work_keys_str_mv AT dadoshlomo possibleoriginoftheneutrinospeedanomalyreportedbyopera
AT dararnon possibleoriginoftheneutrinospeedanomalyreportedbyopera