Search for nu tau appearance via neutrino oscillations in the nu mu CNGS beam with the OPERA experiment

Similar documents
Latest Results from the OPERA Experiment (and new Charge Reconstruction)

arxiv: v1 [hep-ex] 1 Oct 2015

RECENT RESULTS FROM THE OPERA EXPERIMENT

PoS(HEP2005)177. Status of the OPERA experiment. Francesco Di Capua. Universita Federico II and INFN.

Results from the OPERA experiment in the CNGS beam

Latest results of OPERA

arxiv: v1 [hep-ex] 11 May 2013

Results from the OPERA experiment in the CNGS beam

FIRST NEUTRINO EVENTS IN THE OPERA EMULSION TARGET

A. Chukanov On behalf of OPERA collaboration JINR, Dubna TAUP 2011, Munich, 5-9 september, 2011

The CERN-Gran Sasso Neutrino Program

The beam-gas method for luminosity measurement at LHCb

Updated results of the OPERA long baseline neutrino experiment

Status and Performance of the ATLAS Experiment

Neutrino physics with the SHiP experiment at CERN

Study of ν τ production by measuring D s τ events in 400 GeV proton interactions: Test of lepton universality in neutrino charged-current interactions

Status of the OPERA experiment

Tau-neutrino production study in 400 GeV proton interactions

in collaboration with LNF-SEA: U. Denni, G. Papalino LNF-SPAS: A. Cecchetti

The OPERA Experiment


Tau-neutrino production study at CERN SPS: Novel approach by the DsTau experiment

Detecting ν τ s: the CHORUS and OPERA experience. Pasquale Migliozzi

The SHiP experiment. Colloquia: IFAE A. Paoloni( ) on behalf of the SHiP Collaboration. 1. Introduction

ICARUS T600 experiment: latest results and perspectives

Reconstruction and identification of hadronic tau-decays in ATLAS

Measurement of the neutrino velocity with the OPERA detector in the CNGS beam

Dispersion relation results for VCS at JLab

The SHiP experiment and its detector for neutrino physics

Results from the OPERA experiment at the CNGS beam

W and Z boson production in p p collisions from Run II of the Tevatron Collider

Improving the Jet Reconstruction with the Particle Flow Method; an Introduction

Radio-detection of UHECR by the CODALEMA experiment

Electromagnetic calorimetry for the ILC

MINOS. Physics Program and Construction Status. Karol Lang The University of Texas at Austin. YITP: Neutrinos and Implications for Physics Beyond

Experimental results on the atmospheric muon charge ratio

Higgs searches at L3

Prompt Photon Production in p-a Collisions at LHC and the Extraction of Gluon Shadowing

NOE, a Neutrino Oscillation Experiment at Gran Sasso Laboratory

First results and status of the OPERA experiment

OPERA. physics motivation - CNGS OPERA detector ν τ appearance physics program R. Zimmermann Dortmund, April

Search for sterile neutrino mixing in the muon neutrino to tau neutrino appearance channel with the OPERA detector

CNGS beam monitor with LVD

The CNGS neutrino beam

- ICARUS status and near future

NINJAExperiment: NINJA. Tsutomu Fukuda(IAR, Nagoya University) on behalf of NINJA collaboration

The influence of the global atmospheric properties on the detection of UHECR by EUSO on board of the ISS

First steps towards a target laboratory at GANIL

Perspectives of neutrino oscillation physics with long baseline beams

The status of VIRGO. To cite this version: HAL Id: in2p

The atmospheric muon charge ratio: a probe to constrain the atmospheric ν µ / ν µ ratio

Particle identification at LHC: Alice and LHCb

The First Results of K2K long-baseline Neutrino Oscillation Experiment

Methylation-associated PHOX2B gene silencing is a rare event in human neuroblastoma.

Pubblicazioni dal 2008 al 2013

Long Baseline Neutrinos

OPERA physics programme, experimental concept, first results with beam and cosmic, short term prospects.

Easter bracelets for years

Tau-sterile neutrino mixing in NOMAD

Performance of the ICARUS T600 detector

New Limits on Heavy Neutrino from NA62

1. The ICARUS T600 detector

Case report on the article Water nanoelectrolysis: A simple model, Journal of Applied Physics (2017) 122,

ANTARES sensitivity to steady cosmic gamma ray sources

PoS(KAON)049. Testing the µ e universality with K ± l ± ν decays

IMPROVEMENTS OF THE VARIABLE THERMAL RESISTANCE

Long Baseline Neutrino Experiments

arxiv: v1 [hep-ex] 17 Feb 2014 SEARCH FOR NEUTRINO OSCILLATIONS IN APPEARANCE MODE WITH THE OPERA EXPERIMENT

SHiP: a new facility with a dedicated detector for neutrino physics

Neutrino Experiments: Lecture 2 M. Shaevitz Columbia University

PoS(NEUTEL2015)037. The NOvA Experiment. G. Pawloski University of Minnesota Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455, USA

Characterization of the local Electrical Properties of Electrical Machine Parts with non-trivial Geometry

The Short Baseline Neutrino Program at Fermilab

Numerical Modeling of Eddy Current Nondestructive Evaluation of Ferromagnetic Tubes via an Integral. Equation Approach

The CNGS project. Pasquale Migliozzi INFN - Napoli

Smart Bolometer: Toward Monolithic Bolometer with Smart Functions

PoS(NOW2016)003. T2K oscillation results. Lorenzo Magaletti. INFN Sezione di Bari

PHYS 5326 Lecture #2. Wednesday, Jan. 24, 2007 Dr. Jae Yu. Wednesday, Jan. 24, 2007 PHYS 5326, Spring 2007 Jae Yu

PoS(Nufact08)003. Status and Prospects of Long Baseline ν Oscillation Experiments

Thomas Lugand. To cite this version: HAL Id: tel

The Compact Muon Solenoid Experiment. Conference Report. Mailing address: CMS CERN, CH-1211 GENEVA 23, Switzerland. First Physics at CMS

The Compact Muon Solenoid Experiment. Conference Report. Mailing address: CMS CERN, CH-1211 GENEVA 23, Switzerland. Commissioning of the CMS Detector

DEM modeling of penetration test in static and dynamic conditions

Neutrino oscillation physics potential of Hyper-Kamiokande

NA62: Ultra-Rare Kaon Decays

Prospects of ATLAS and CMS for B physics and CP violation

Publications of Francesco Arneodo: journal articles

Sound intensity as a function of sound insulation partition

Vibro-acoustic simulation of a car window

Particle Detectors. Summer Student Lectures 2007 Werner Riegler, CERN, History of Instrumentation History of Particle Physics

Neutrino Cross Sections and Scattering Physics

STATUS OF ATLAS TILE CALORIMETER AND STUDY OF MUON INTERACTIONS. 1 Brief Description of the ATLAS Tile Calorimeter

Geant4 and Fano cavity : where are we?

Status and Perspectives for KM3NeT/ORCA

Evolution of the cooperation and consequences of a decrease in plant diversity on the root symbiont diversity

A new simple recursive algorithm for finding prime numbers using Rosser s theorem

Muon reconstruction performance in ATLAS at Run-2

Exogenous input estimation in Electronic Power Steering (EPS) systems

First neutrino beam and cosmic tracks. GDR neutrino

The ICARUS Project FRONTIERS IN CONTEMPORARY PHYSICS II. Vanderbilt University, March 5-10, Sergio Navas (ETH Zürich) " Atmospheric neutrinos

Transcription:

Search for nu tau appearance via neutrino oscillations in the nu mu CNGS beam with the OPERA experiment A. Zghiche To cite this version: A. Zghiche. Search for nu tau appearance via neutrino oscillations in the nu mu CNGS beam with the OPERA experiment. XXIe Rencontres de Blois Windows on the Universe, Jun 2009, Blois, France. The GIOI publishers, pp.427-430, 2010. <in2p3-00429513> HAL Id: in2p3-00429513 http://hal.in2p3.fr/in2p3-00429513 Submitted on 3 Nov 2009 HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access archive for the deposit and dissemination of scientific research documents, whether they are published or not. The documents may come from teaching and research institutions in France or abroad, or from public or private research centers. L archive ouverte pluridisciplinaire HAL, est destinée au dépôt et à la diffusion de documents scientifiques de niveau recherche, publiés ou non, émanant des établissements d enseignement et de recherche français ou étrangers, des laboratoires publics ou privés.

LAPP-EXP-2009-12 October 2009 Search for appearance via neutrino oscillations in the CNGS beam with the OPERA experiment A. Zghiche LAPP - Université de Savoie - CNRS/ IN2P3 BP. 110, F-74941 Annecy-le-Vieux Cedex, France Presented at the 21 ème Rencontres de Blois Windows on the Universe, Château de Blois (France), 21-26 June 2009

Search for ν τ appearance via neutrino oscillations in the ν µ CNGS beam with the OPERA experiment A. Zghiche LAPP, Universit de Savoie, CNRS/IN2P3, 9 Chemin de Bellevue, F-74941 Annecy-Le-Vieux, France The OPERA neutrino detector in the underground Gran Sasso Laboratory (LNGS) is designed to realize the first detection of neutrino oscillations in the appearance mode through the study of ν µ ν τ oscillations. The apparatus consists of an emulsion/lead target associated to electronic detectors and is placed in the high energy long-baseline CERN to LNGS beam (CNGS) 730 km away from the neutrino source. Runs with CNGS neutrinos were successfully carried out in 2007 and 2008 with the detector fully operational with its related facilities for the emulsion handling and analysis. After a brief description of the beam and of the experimental setup we report on the collection, reconstruction and analysis procedures of first samples of neutrino interaction events. 1 Introduction Recent Solar and atmospheric neutrino experiments discovered that lepton flavour is not conserved, thus identifying the new physics responsible of this anomaly has become the aim of active calculations. Although observed flavour conversions could be produced by different mechanisms, simplicity suggests oscillations of massive neutrinos to explain the data, provided that mixing angles among the Standard Model neutrinos are sufficiently large. Present data strongly disfavor alternative exotic possibilities, such as neutrino decay or oscillations into extra sterile neutrinos and show some hints for the characteristic features of oscillations. Oscillations can be directly seen by precise reactor and long-baseline beam experiments, that are respectively testing the solar and atmospheric anomalies. In the case of the atmospheric neutrino sector, accelerator experiments can probe the same oscillation parameter region as atmospheric neutrino experiments. This is the case of the OPERA experiment dedicated to the first direct detection of ν µ ν τ appearance, not yet observed, while being the most probable explanation of the atmospheric data. The OPERA 1 experiment is located in the Gran Sasso underground laboratory (LNGS) in Italy. The detector developed by the OPERA international collaboration is designed to search for ν τ appearance in the high energy ν µ CERN to Gran Sasso (CNGS) beam, 730 km downstream of the neutrino source. The ν τ direct appearance search is based on the observation of leptonic and hadronic τ decays in the ν τ charge current interaction (CC) events. Because of the weak neutrino cross section and the τ short lifetime, the OPERA detector 2 must combine a huge mass with a high spatial resolution. Both requirements are fulfilled using nuclear emulsions combined with lead plates and assembled into detector units called bricks. The CNGS ν µ beam is designed to provide 4.5 10 19 proton-on-target/year (p.o.t./y) with a running time of 200 days per year. The beam parameters have been tuned to optimize the number of ν τ charged current interactions in the OPERA detector. Thus, the average neutrino

Figure 1: View of the OPERA detector energy is < E >= 17 GeV for an almost pure ν µ beam only with a small contamination of ν µ (4%) and of ν e and ν e (less than 1%). The average L/E ratio is 43 km/gev, far from the oscillation maximum, due to the high energy required for ν τ appearance. In 5 years of data taking, OPERA foresees to observe 10 to 15 ν τ events from oscillation at full mixing in the range 2.5 10 3 < m 2 < 3.0 10 3 ev 2, with a total background of 0.75 events. 2 The OPERA Detector OPERA is a hybrid detector (Figure 1) made of two identical Super Modules (SM) each consisting of a target section of about 625 tons made of emulsion/lead bricks, of a scintillator tracker detector (TT) needed to trigger the read-out and localize neutrino interactions within the target, and of a muon spectrometer. The latter, made of two parts located downstream of each SM, provides the charge and momentum informations of the penetrating tracks. Each spectrometer is equipped with RPC bakelite chambers and High Precision Tracker (HPT) composed of drift-tubes. The spectrometer reduces the charge confusion to less than 0.3%, gives a muon momentum measurement better than 20% for a momentum less than 50 GeV/c and reaches a muon identification efficiency of 95%. The rejection of the charged particles originating from outside the target fiducial region coming from neutrino interactions in the surrounding rock material is provided by a large size anti-coincidence detector (VETO), made of two glass RPC planes mounted in front of the first part of the target. The target section is composed of 29 walls. Each one is made of an X-Y double layered wall of scintillator strips (the TT) and a vertical supporting steel structure that contains the basic target detector units called Emulsion Cloud Chambers (ECC) bricks. A total of 150036 ECC bricks with a total mass of 1.25 ktons have been produced to make the OPERA target. Each ECC brick is a sequence of 57 emulsion films interleaved with 56 (1 mm thick) lead plates. An emulsion film is composed of a pair of 44 µm thick emulsion layers deposited on a 205 µm plastic base. Downstream of each brick (Figure 2), an emulsion film doublet called Changeable Sheet (CS) is attached in a separate enveloppe. The CS doublet can be detached from the brick for analysis to confirm and locate the tracks produced in the electronic detectors by neutrino interactions. The CS doublet is the interface between the ECC brick and the electronic detector. The ECC bricks have been assembled underground at an average rate of 700 per day by a dedicated fully automated Brick Assembly Machine (BAM). The detector is equipped with an automatic machine, the Brick Manipulator System (BMS) that achieved the entire brick insertion and will perform the extraction of bricks from the detector during the foreseen data taking period. In order to cope with the analysis of the large number

Figure 2: Schematic view of two bricks with their Changeable Sheets and target tracker planes. of emulsion sheets related to neutrino interactions, large automated facilities are used for the handling, the development and the scanning of the emulsion films. For the latter task, two new generation computer driven fast automatic optical microscopes have been developed: the European Scanning System ESS 3 and the Japanese S-UTS 4. While the implementation differs in both the hardware and software architectures, the two systems have comparable performances ensuring a scanning speed up to 20 cm 2 /h, and a spatial and angular resolution of the order of 1µm and 1 mrad, respectively. 3 The OPERA Event Selection For a given event, the electronic detectors are used to compute a probability map of the location of the interaction brick. The brick with the highest probability is extracted by the BMS. Then the CS doublet is detached from the brick and developed in the underground facility. The two emulsion films are scanned by using fast automated microscopes. If the track candidates found on the CS doublet match with the electronic data then the brick is exposed for 12 hours to cosmic rays in order to provide the film-to-film alignment in the brick. Subsequently the brick is developed in an automated facility and sent to the scanning laboratories either in Europe (ESS) or in Japan (S-UTS). The vertex finding strategy consists in following back, film by film, the tracks found on the CS doublet until the tracks stop inside the brick. To confirm the stopping track, an area scan of several mm 2 around the stopping point of the tracks is performed for 5 films upstream and downstream. Then an interaction vertex can be reconstructed and a topology compatible with the decay of a τ lepton is sought. 4 Run Status and Real Data Events After a short commissioning run in 2006, the CNGS operation started on September 2007 at rather low intensity with 40% of the total OPERA target mass. Due to the operational problems of the CNGS, the physics run lasted only a few days. During this run 0.082 10 19 protons on target (p.o.t.) were accumulated and 465 events were recorded, but only 35 in the target region. The other events originated in the spectrometers, the supporting structures, the rock surrounding the cavern and the hall structure. From June to November 2008, 1.782 10 19 p.o.t. were delivered by the CNGS. OPERA collected 10100 events with 1663 interactions in the target region. This number is compatible with the MC (Monte Carlo) simulation prediction of 1723 interactions. All electronic detectors were operational and the live time of the data acquisition system exceeded 99%. For the events classified as CC interactions in the target the muon momentum and the muon angle in the vertical (y-x) plane with respect to the horizontal

(z) axis distributions were found in agreement with the MC simulation expectation 5. By midjune 2009, 1019 bricks have been developed and around 746 events have been located. The brick finding efficiency value is around 80%. The vertex finding efficiency in the selected bricks for CC events is between 84-95 % while a value of 93% is predicted by the MC simulation. For NC events, the efficiency ranges between 70 and 91 % while the MC simulation prediction is 81%. In a sample of 550 ν µ CC interactions and among the located events, 8 events show a charm-like decay topology in agreement with the MC simulation predicted value of 10. Because charm decays exhibit the same topology as ν τ decays and because they are a potential source of background if the muon at the primary vertex is not identified, Charm production and decay events constitute the best calibration channel for the OPERA detector. A charm-like topology is shown in Figure 3 where a track exibits a decay-kink. Figure 3: Display of the OPERA electronic detector of a ν µ charged current interaction with a charm like topology (top panel). The emulsion reconstruction is shown in the bottom panels where the charm-like topology is seen with a kink: top view (bottom left), side view (bottom center), frontal view (bottom right). The dots in the lower panel are due to an electromagnetic shower. 5 Conclusion During the 2008 CNGS run all the electronic detectors performed well. The OPERA strategy has been validated and the vertex location was successfully accomplished for CC and NC events. In the analyzed data sample of 550 ν µ CC interactions, 8 events with a charm-like topology were found. This is in agreement with the expectations and shows the success of combining the topological and kinematical analyses. The 2008 run constitutes an important milestone for the OPERA experiment. For the 2009 run, around 3.5 10 19 p.o.t. are foreseen to be acquired. The integrated statistics would be sufficient to expect the observation of two events and give a precise estimation of detector efficiency, background and sensitivity. References 1. M. Guler et al., The OPERA Collaboration, Experimental Proposal, CERN 98-02, INFN/AE-98/05 (1998). 2. OPERA Collaboration, R. Acquafredda et al., JINST 4 P04018 (2009). 3. L. Arrabito et al., Nucl. Instrum. Meth. A 568 (2006) 578; L. Arrabito et al., JINST 2 P05004 (2007); Armenise et al., Nucl. Instrum. Meth. A 551 (2005) 261. 4. T. Nakano, Automatic analysis of nuclear emulsion, Ph.D. Thesis, Nagoya University, Japan (1997). 5. OPERA Collaboration, N. Agafonova et al., JINST 4 P06020 (2009).