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Results from the Baksan Experiment on Sterile Transitions (BEST)

The Baksan Experiment on Sterile Transitions (BEST) was designed to investigate the deficit of electron neutrinos, $\nu_{e}$, observed in previous gallium-based radiochemical measurements with high-intensity neutrino sources, commonly referred to as the \textit{gallium anomaly}, which could be inter...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Barinov, V.V., Cleveland, B.T., Danshin, S.N., Ejiri, H., Elliott, S.R., Frekers, D., Gavrin, V.N., Gorbachev, V.V., Gorbunov, D.S., Haxton, W.C., Ibragimova, T.V., Kim, I., Kozlova, Yu.P., Kravchuk, L.V., Kuzminov, V.V., Lubsandorzhiev, B.K., Malyshkin, Yu.M., Massarczyk, R., Matveev, V.A., Mirmov, I.N., Nico, J.S., Petelin, A.L., Robertson, R.G.H., Sinclair, D., Shikhin, A.A., Tarasov, V.A., Trubnikov, G.V., Veretenkin, E.P., Wilkerson, J.F., Zvir, A.I.
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/2782036
Descripción
Sumario:The Baksan Experiment on Sterile Transitions (BEST) was designed to investigate the deficit of electron neutrinos, $\nu_{e}$, observed in previous gallium-based radiochemical measurements with high-intensity neutrino sources, commonly referred to as the \textit{gallium anomaly}, which could be interpreted as evidence for oscillations between $\nu_e$ and sterile neutrino ($\nu_s$) states. A 3.414-MCi \nuc{51}{Cr}$\nu_e$ source was placed at the center of two nested Ga volumes and measurements were made of the production of \nuc{71}{Ge} through the charged current reaction, \nuc{71}{Ga}($\nu_e$,e$^-$)\nuc{71}{Ge}, at two average distances. The measured production rates for the inner and the outer targets respectively are ($54.9^{+2.5}_{-2.4}(\mbox{stat})\pm1.4 (\mbox{syst})$) and ($55.6^{+2.7}_{-2.6}(\mbox{stat})\pm1.4 (\mbox{syst})$) atoms of \nuc{71}{Ge}/d. The ratio ($R$) of the measured rate of \nuc{71}{Ge} production at each distance to the expected rate from the known cross section and experimental efficiencies are $R_{in}=0.791\pm0.05$ and $R_{out}= 0.766\pm0.05$. The ratio of the outer to the inner result is 0.97$\pm$0.07, which is consistent with unity within uncertainty. The rates at each distance were found to be similar, but 20-24% lower than expected, thus reaffirming the anomaly. These results are consistent with $\nu_e \rightarrow \nu_s$ oscillations with a relatively large $\Delta m^2$ ($>$1 eV$^2$) and mixing sin$^2 2\theta$ ($\approx$0.4).