Title: Introduction to Neutrino Factory Physics
1Introduction to Neutrino Factory Physics
1st Meeting of the Muon Concertation and
Oversight Committee CERN, Thursday 18 April 2002
- Ken Peach
- Rutherford Appleton Laboratory
2The Standard Model of Particles and their
Interactions
Quarks
Force Carriers
Leptons
Generations of matter
3The Standard Model
- The Parameters
- 6 quark masses
- mu , mc, mt
- md, ms, mb
- 3 lepton masses
- me, mm, mt
- 2 vector boson masses
- Mw, MZ
- (mg, mg0)
- 1 Higgs mass
- Mh
- 3 coupling constants
- GF, a, as
- 3 quark mixing angles
- q12, q23, q13
- 1 quark phase
- d
Neutrino masses set to 0!
4The History of the Neutrino
- 1930s Neutrino proposed
- 1940s ???
- 1950s electron neutrino observed, V-A proposed
- 1960s muon neutrino observed, V-A physics
neutrino oscillations suggested - 1970s neutral currents, DIS, structure functions
solar neutrino deficit - 1980s sin2qw, more structure functions, charm,
... - 1990s more structure functions,sin2qw, LEP (3
generations) more solar neutrino deficit
atmospheric neutrino deficit - 2000s Tau neutrino discovered, even more solar
neutrinos accelerator oscillation
measurements??? - 2010s neutrino factory ???? CP violation???
5The Solar Neutrino Problem
6Solar Neutrino Experiments
- Radio-chemical experiments
- i) Chlorine experiments (Davis et al, Homestake
mine) - Next slide
- ii) SAGE (Baksan) GALLEX (Gran Sasso)
- ne 71Ga ?71Ge e- 71Ge ? 71Ga (11.4d)
Electron Conversion - Threshold 0.23MeV Sensitive to the main pp
flux!!!! - Production rate 0.04/tonne/day!
- Water Cerenkov experiments
- i) Kamiokande and SuperKamiokande
- Electron Scattering (ES) nx e-? nx e-
- ii) SNO
- Reactor experiments
- BUGEY, CHOOZ, PALO VERDE, KAMLAND
- (not solar neutrino experiments as such, but in
the same energy regime with electron
antineutrinos.)
7Homestake mine - Ray Davis
Look for solar neutrinos through the inverse b
reaction ne 37Cl ? 37Ar e-
35 d EC
37Cl 4.9MeV
8Sudbury Neutrino Observatory (SNO)
- Look for neutrino interactions in water
- SuperKamiokande Electron Scattering
- ES nx e-? nx e-
- SNO
- ES (nx e- ? nx e-)
- CC (ned ? p p e-)
- The ES rates can be directly compared SNO and SK
- SK statistically dominated 20kT vs 1kT, 1000d
vs 200d - CC rate only sensitive to electron neutrinos!
- SNO/SSM 0.347 ? 0.029 (ne only)
- SK/SSM 0.459 ? 0.017 (ne 15 nm,t)
- Difference is 0.112 ? 0.034 (3.3 s.d.)
- Solid evidence for active non-electron neutrinos
from the sun - SNO advantage
- NC (nxd ? nx p n g)
9SuperKamiokande
10Summary of solar neutrino experiments
11Summary of evidence of a neutrino problem
- Solar Neutrinos
- Electron flux 0.3-0.5 expected from Standard
Solar Model - Evidence for an energy dependence of the effect
- Probably ne?nm
- Atmospheric neutrinos
- Muon flux 0.5 expected from production
mechanism - Strong evidence for energy and length dependence
- Probably nm?nt
- Accelerator reactor neutrino beams
- Mainly limits
- K2K beginning to see an effect
- LSND ?
- Something happens to neutrinos between creation
and detection! - Not a small effect (in general) ? 50 loss!
- Not part of the Standard Model new physics
122-flavour oscillations
- 2 flavour eigenstates na,nb, 2 mass eigenstates
n1,n2
- After a finite time, the neutrino flavour
balance has changed - Some wrong flavour component has been
introduced. - Note
- 1. If the masses are the same there is no
oscillation - 2. If a mass is zero, that neutrino decouples
from oscillation - 3. The oscillation is a beating phenomenon
- In the lab frame, the propagation is
- Oscillation depends upon
- Dm2ijm2i-m2j
132 flavour oscillation
- 2 flavours (a b) 2 mass eigenstates (i j)
14Neutrino Oscillation Measurements
Probability that a nb appears as a function of
L from a na produced at L0
Signal
15Summary of signals
16Impact of SNO on neutrino oscillations
Lisi
17Some examples
E (GeV) Dm2 (eV2) lE/1.27Dm2 (km) q (deg) L (km) Prob. na ? na Prob. na ? nb Comment
10-2 10-7 80,000 45 1.5 108 0.5 0.5 Solar vacuum
10-2 10-6 8,000 5 1.5 108 1 0.01 SMA
10-2 10-4 80 45 1.5 108 0.5 0.5 LMA
1 10-4 8,000 10 12,000 1 0.03 e Atmos. ?
1 10-3 800 45 8 1 0.0001 m Atmos. ?
10 10-3 8,000 45 8 1 0 m Atmos. ?
1 10-3 800 45 12,000 0.5 0.5 m Atmos. ?
10 10-3 8,000 45 12,000 0.6 0.4 m Atmos. ?
10-1 1 .08 0.1 0.1 1 10-5 LSND
183 flavour oscillation
- Neutrinos are created as flavour eigenstates
- electron ne , muon nm , tau nt
- but these are not the mass eigenstates
- n1 , n2 , n3
- The flavour eigenstates are a mix of the mass
eigenstates
U is the Maki-Nakagawa-Sakata Matrix
Prog.Theor.Phys.28 870 (1962).
19Neutrino Mixing
20CP-violation
- Ignore sub-leading effects in the CP-even
transitions
21Neutrino Mixing what do we know?
absolute mass scale ? Less than few eV
(electron neutrino)
22- Oscillation phenomenology (CP/T violating)
L/E
23CP-violation and T-violation
- Fundamentally equivalent via CPT Theorem
- But different systematically practically
- CP violation
- Compare neutrino with antineutrino oscillations
- T-violation
- Compare oscillation of (say) electron to muon
neutrino with muon to electron
neutrino - Both experiments difficult
- Flux normalisation
- Matter effects in the earth
- Backgrounds (especially in electron channel)
- Redundancy (in principle)
24CP-violation what L/E?
- Flux/m2/muon decay at a distance L (m) from muons
of energy E (gm10E, E in GeV) (10E/L)2/p. - e.g. Em50GeV, L1000km gives 8 ? 10-8
n/m2/m-decay - Significance independent of sinq13
- independent of L
- Effect ? sin2(Dm231L/4E) ? L2 but flux ? L-2
- ? E
- Effect ? sin2(Dm231L/4E) ? E-2 but flux ? E2
but snp ? E - Need sin(Dm231L/4E) maximal (p/2)
Em GeV Dm2 eV2 lE/1.27Dm2 km Sin term _at_ 3300 km n Flux/m2 _at_ 3300km/1021 m Comment
20 4 10-3 3,300 1 1012 m Atmos.
20 10-4 160,000 0.04 1012 LMA
25Number of Events?
- CC cross-section f ? 0.67 ? 10-38 cm2 ? En
(GeV) - f1 for neutrinos and 0.5 for anti-neutrinos
- Flux 10-4 (Em/L)2/p (L in km, E in GeV)
Em20 GeV, L3300km, Nm1021, MD50kT gives
lt6,000 events
c2s2lt0.01
(sind 1) 20 effect ? ?1200 events
CPV
26 a complicated business
a 2?2 GFneEn 7.6 10-5 r E Where is the
electron density r is the density (g/cm3) E
is the neutrino energy (GeV)
27Matter v. CP-violation effects
28nt appearance
29 Basic features of a neutrino factory
- High intensity proton source
- 2-50GeV, 100-1Hz
- High power target
- 4MW (liquid metal, moving solid, )
- Pion capture decay channel, muon capture
- solenoid
- Cooling
- phase rotation, ionisation
- Acceleration
- Storage
- Aim gt1020 muon decays/year
- Em 20-50 GeV
- All are a technical challenge
30What can you do with a neutrino factory?
- (almost) complete study of neutrino mixing
- ne, nm ? nx disappearance
- ne ? nm appearance
- ne, nm ? nt appearance
- and
- m? m- charge conjugate
Note a Neutrino Factory is the only way to
create pure high energy flavour-tagged electron
neutrino beams!
31The Neutrino Factory
- CPV gt 1020 muon decays
- Conventional n beams
- p,m K decay
- Some flavour selectivity
- Contamination
- Fluxes 1017-1018 n
- Reactor n beams
- Pure ne
- Huge Fluxes
- Very low energy (MeV)
- Super Conventional n beams
- p, ( some m) decay
- Flavour selectivity (nm)
- Low Contamination at Elt200MeV
- Fluxes 1018-1019 n?
- The Neutrino Factory
32CP reach of a neutrino factory
40 kT detector 50GeV muons 1021 useful decays 2
(3) baselines
Gomez-Cadenas
33Challenges
- Machine
- proton source
- target
- pion and muon capture
- muon cooling
- (RLAs)
- muon storage ring
- RADIATION!
- Detector
- technology ( mass)
- magnetic field
- electron charge identification
- tau identification
- cost
- cost
- cost
34Scientific Challenges
- Theory
- What gives neutrinos mass?
- Why three generations?
- What determines the mixing angles?
- Why are left- right-handed neutrinos so
different? - Are they Majorana particles?
- If so, why? If not, why not?
- Is CP/T violation in the neutrino sector a factor
in the baryon asymmetry of the universe?
- Phenomenology
- What is the impact of Beyond the Standard Model
on the MNS phenomenology? - How can absolute neutrino masses be inferred or
measured? - What constraints on the MNS matrix? Are there
loopholes? - How to show whether Majorana neutrinos? How to
measure Majorana phases? - Other implications of finite neutrino masses
mixing?
35Summary Conclusions
- A neutrino factory provides the best opportunity
to study in detail the neutrino sector - CP physics
- oscillation physics
- new physics?
- (not discussed) A neutrino factory has an
exciting and extensive programme of conventional
neutrino physics - (not discussed) The proton source could provide
new opportunities for rare decay and precision
measurements of particle properties - (not discussed) A neutrino factory is an
essential first step towards a muon collider - Technical challenges abound (machine detectors)
- A neutrino factory is needed somewhere at some
time - soon?
- Crucial low energy experiments
- Neutrinoless double beta decay
- Neutrino absolute mass measurement
- Cosmological and Astrophysical observations