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Scanning the Earth with solar neutrinos and DUNE

We explore oscillations of the solar B8 neutrinos in the Earth in detail. The relative excess of night νe events (the day-night asymmetry) is computed as function of the neutrino energy and the nadir angle η of its trajectory. The finite energy resolution of the detector causes an important attenuat...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ioannisian, Ara, Smirnov, Alexei, Wyler, Daniel
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.96.036005
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2255198
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author Ioannisian, Ara
Smirnov, Alexei
Wyler, Daniel
author_facet Ioannisian, Ara
Smirnov, Alexei
Wyler, Daniel
author_sort Ioannisian, Ara
collection CERN
description We explore oscillations of the solar B8 neutrinos in the Earth in detail. The relative excess of night νe events (the day-night asymmetry) is computed as function of the neutrino energy and the nadir angle η of its trajectory. The finite energy resolution of the detector causes an important attenuation effect, while the layer-like structure of the Earth density leads to an interesting parametric suppression of the oscillations. Different features of the η- dependence encode information about the structure (such as density jumps) of the Earth density profile; thus measuring the η distribution allows the scanning of the interior of the Earth. We estimate the sensitivity of the DUNE experiment to such measurements. About 75 neutrino events are expected per day in 40 kt. For high values of Δm212 and Eν>11  MeV, the corresponding D-N asymmetry is about 4% and can be measured with 15% accuracy after 5 years of data taking. The difference of the D-N asymmetry between high and low values of Δm212 can be measured at the 4σ level. The relative excess of the νe signal varies with the nadir angle up to 50%. DUNE may establish the existence of the dip in the η- distribution at the (2–3)σ level.
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institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
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publishDate 2017
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spelling cern-22551982021-09-16T11:30:24Zdoi:10.1103/PhysRevD.96.036005http://cds.cern.ch/record/2255198engIoannisian, AraSmirnov, AlexeiWyler, DanielScanning the Earth with solar neutrinos and DUNEhep-phParticle Physics - PhenomenologyWe explore oscillations of the solar B8 neutrinos in the Earth in detail. The relative excess of night νe events (the day-night asymmetry) is computed as function of the neutrino energy and the nadir angle η of its trajectory. The finite energy resolution of the detector causes an important attenuation effect, while the layer-like structure of the Earth density leads to an interesting parametric suppression of the oscillations. Different features of the η- dependence encode information about the structure (such as density jumps) of the Earth density profile; thus measuring the η distribution allows the scanning of the interior of the Earth. We estimate the sensitivity of the DUNE experiment to such measurements. About 75 neutrino events are expected per day in 40 kt. For high values of Δm212 and Eν>11  MeV, the corresponding D-N asymmetry is about 4% and can be measured with 15% accuracy after 5 years of data taking. The difference of the D-N asymmetry between high and low values of Δm212 can be measured at the 4σ level. The relative excess of the νe signal varies with the nadir angle up to 50%. DUNE may establish the existence of the dip in the η- distribution at the (2–3)σ level.We explore oscillations of the solar $^8$B neutrinos in the Earth in detail. The relative excess of night $\nu_e$ events (the Night-Day asymmetry) is computed as function of the neutrino energy and the nadir angle $\eta$ of its trajectory. The finite energy resolution of the detector causes an important attenuation effect, while the layer-like structure of the Earth density leads to an interesting parametric suppression of the oscillations. Different features of the $\eta-$ dependence encode information about the structure (such as density jumps) of the Earth density profile; thus measuring the $\eta$ distribution allows the scanning of the interior of the Earth. We estimate the sensitivity of the DUNE experiment to such measurements. About 75 neutrino events are expected per day in 40 kt. For high values of $\Delta m^2_{21}$ and $E_\nu > $11 MeV, the corresponding D-N asymmetry is about 4\% and can be measured with $15\%$ accuracy after 5 years of data taking. The difference of the D-N asymmetry between high and low values of $\Delta m^2_{21}$ can be measured at the $4\sigma$ level. The relative excess of the $\nu_e$ signal varies with the nadir angle up to 50\%. DUNE may establish the existence of the dip in the $\eta-$ distribution at the $(2 - 3) \sigma$ level.CERN-TH-2016-256arXiv:1702.06097oai:cds.cern.ch:22551982017-02-20
spellingShingle hep-ph
Particle Physics - Phenomenology
Ioannisian, Ara
Smirnov, Alexei
Wyler, Daniel
Scanning the Earth with solar neutrinos and DUNE
title Scanning the Earth with solar neutrinos and DUNE
title_full Scanning the Earth with solar neutrinos and DUNE
title_fullStr Scanning the Earth with solar neutrinos and DUNE
title_full_unstemmed Scanning the Earth with solar neutrinos and DUNE
title_short Scanning the Earth with solar neutrinos and DUNE
title_sort scanning the earth with solar neutrinos and dune
topic hep-ph
Particle Physics - Phenomenology
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.96.036005
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2255198
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AT smirnovalexei scanningtheearthwithsolarneutrinosanddune
AT wylerdaniel scanningtheearthwithsolarneutrinosanddune