Title: Stephen Kahn
1A Super-Neutrino Beam From BNL to Homestake
- Steve Kahn
- http//pubweb.bnl.gov/people/kahn/talks/bnl2homest
ake.pdf
2Staging to a Neutrino Factory
- Two feasibility studies for a Neutrino Factory
have been concluded. - These studies indicate a cost of 2-2.5 B.
- This does not include contingency and overhead.
- This kind of money may not be available in the
current climate - They indicate an optimistic turn-on date of 2012.
- We might like to do some physics before that.
- A staged approach to building a Neutrino Factory
maybe desirable. - First Phase Upgrade AGS to create a 1 MW Proton
Driver and target station. - Second Phase Build phase rotation and part of
cooling system. - Third Phase Build a pre-acceleration Linac to
raise beam momentum to 2.5 GeV/c - Fourth Phase Complete the Neutrino Factory.
- Fifth Phase Upgrade to entry-level Higgs Factory
Muon Collider. - Each phase can support a physics program.
3First Phase Super Neutrino Beam
- Upgrade AGS to 1MW Proton Driver
- Both BNL and JHF have eventual plans for their
proton drivers to be upgraded to 4 MW. - Build Solenoid Capture System
- 20 T Magnet surrounding target. Solenoid field
falls off to 1.6 T in 20 m. - This magnet focuses both ? and ??. Beam will
have both ? and ? - A solenoid is more robust than a horn magnet in a
high radiation. - A horn may not function in the 4 MW environment.
- A solenoid will have a longer lifetime since it
is not pulsed.
4Types of Capture/Focus Systems Considered
- Traditional Horn Focus System
- Uses toroidal magnetic field.
- Focuses efficiently
- B? ? p?
- Conductor necessary along access.
- Concern for radiation damage.
- Cannot be superconducting.
- Pulsed horn may have trouble surviving 109
cycles that a 1-4 MW system might require. - Solenoid Capture System similar to that used by
Neutrino Factory - Solenoid Horn System
5 Simulations to Calculate Fluxes
- Model Solenoid/Horn Magnet in GEANT.
- Use Geant/Fluka option for the particle
production model. - Use 30 cm Hg target ( 2 interaction lengths.)
- No target inclination.
- We want the high momentum component of the pions.
- Re-absorption of the pions is not a problem.
- Solenoid Field profile on axis is B(z)Bmax/(1a
z) - Independent parameters are Bmax, Bmin and the
solenoid length, L. - Horn Field is assumed to be a toroid.
- Pions and Kaons are tracked through the field and
allowed to decay. - Fluxes are tallied at detector positions.
- The following plots show ?? flux and ?e /?? flux
ratios.
6Solenoid Capture
Sketch of solenoid arrangement for Neutrino
Factory
- If only ? and not ? is desired, then a dipole
magnet could be inserted between adjacent
solenoids above.
- Inserting a dipole also gives control over the
mean energy of the neutrino beam.
- Since ? and ? events can be separated with a
modest magnetic field in the detector, it will be
desirable to collect both signs of ? at the same
time.
7Captured Pion Distributions
PT 225 MeV/c corresponding to 7.5 cm radius of
solenoid
P? gt 2 GeV/c
Decay Length of Pions
66 of ? are lost since they have PTgt225 MeV/c
? 50 m
ltLgt7 m
PT distribution of ??
A 15 cm radius of the solenoid would capture 67
of the ?
PT, GeV/c
L, cm
8Rate and ?e/?? as a function of Decay Tunnel
Length
9Comparison of Horn and Solenoid Focused Beams
- The Figure shows the spectra at 0º at 1 km
from the target. - Solenoid Focused Beam.
- Two Horned Focused Beam designed for E889.
- So-called Perfect Focused beam where every
particle leaving the target goes in the forward
direction. - The perfect beam is not attainable. It is used
to evaluate efficiencies. - A solenoid focused beam selects a lower energy
neutrino spectrum than the horn beam. - This may be preferable for CP violation physics
10Horn and Solenoid Comparison (cont.)
- This figure shows a similar comparison of the 1
km spectra at 1.25º off axis. - The off axis beam is narrower and lower energy.
- Also a curve with the ? flux plus 1/3 the anti-?
flux is shown in red. - Both signs of ? are focused by a solenoid capture
magnet. - A detector with a magnetic field will be able to
separate the charge current ? and anti-?.
11? Flux Seen at Off-Axis Angles
- We desire to have Low Energy ? beam.
- We also desire to have a narrow band beam.
- I have chosen 1.5º off-axis for the calculations.
12?e/?? Ratio
- The figure shows the ?e flux spectrum for the
solenoid focused and horn beams. - The horn focused beam has a higher energy ?e
spectrum that is dominated by K??oe?e - The solenoid channel is effective in capturing
and holding ? and ?. - The ?e spectrum from the solenoid system has a
large contribution at low energy from ?????ee. - The allowed decay path can be varied to reduce
the ?e/?? ratio at the cost of reducing the ??
rate. - We expect the ?e/?? ratio to be 1
13Running the AGS with 12 GeV Protons
- We could run the AGS with a lower energy proton
beam. - If we keep the same machine power level we would
run at a 5 Hz repetition rate. - This would work for a conventional beam since we
are not concerned with merging bunches. - Figure shows Perfect Beam for 12 and 24 GeV
incident protons. - 12 GeV profile is multiplied by 2 for the higher
repetition rate.
Perfect Beam
1412 GeV Protons (cont.)
1.25 degrees off axis
On Axis
15Detector Choices
- The far detector would be placed 350 km from BNL
(near Ithica, NY). - There are salt mines in this area. One could go
deep underground if necessary. - If a massive detector were built at say 2540 km
from BNL (at Homestake), this would permit the
determination of the CP violation sign using mass
effect. - Two possible detector technologies that can be
considered are Liquid Ar and Water Cherenkov. - We are considering Liquid Ar TPC similar to
Icarus. The far detector would have 50 ktons
fiducial volume (65 ktons total.) - Provides good electron and ?o detection.
- The detector will sit between dipole coils to
provide a field to determine the lepton charge. - This technology is expensive and may not be
practical.
16Detector Choices (cont.)
- Water Cherenkov technology similar to Super-K may
be the only reasonable way to achieve a Megaton
detector. - Charge determination using a magnetic field may
not be possible with this type of detector. The
neutrino source must sign select the ?. - A close-in 1 kton detectors at 1 km and/or 3 km
would be needed. - 1 km detector gives ? beam alignment and high
statistics for detector performance. - 3 km detector is far enough away that ? source is
a point.
17Detectors Are Placed 1.5o Off ? Beam Axis
- Placing detectors at a fixed angle off axis
provides a similar E? profile at all distances. - It also provides a lower E? distribution than on
axis. - ? from ? decays are captured by long solenoid
channel. They provide low E? enhancement. - Integrated flux at each detector
- Units are ?/m2/POT
18Neutrino Oscillation Physics
- The experiment would look at the following
channels - ?? disappearance -- primarily ?????
oscillations. - Sensitive to ?m232 and ?23
- Examine ratio of ?n??p (QE) at 350 km detector to
3 km detector as a function of E?. - ??N???oN events
- These events are insensitive to oscillation state
of ? - Can be used for normalization.
- ?e appearance
- (continued on next transparency)
19?e Appearance Channel
- There are several contributions to P(????e)
- Solar Term Psolarsin22?12 cos2?13cos2?23sin2(?m2
solL/4E) - This term is very small.
- Tau Term P?sin22?13sin2?23sin2 (?m2atmL/4E)
- This is the dominant term.
- This term is sensitive to ?13 and would allow us
to measure it with the 1 MW proton driver. - Terms involving the CP phase ?
- There are both CP conserving and violating terms
involving ?. - The CP violating term can be measured as
- This asymmetry is larger at lower E?. This could
be 25 of the total appearance signal at the
optimum E? - The 4 MW proton driver would be necessary for
this asymmetry
20Event Estimates Without Oscillations
- Below is shown event estimates expected from a
solenoid capture system - The near detectors are 1 kton and the far
detector is 50 kton. - The source is a 1 MW proton driver.
- The experiment is run for 5 Snowmass years. This
is the running period used in the JHF-Kamioka
neutrino proposal. - These are obtained by integrating the flux with
the appropriate cross sections. - Estimates with a 4 MW proton driver source would
be four times larger.
21Determination of ?m223
- Consider a scenario where
- ?m2125?10?5 eV2
- ?23?/4
- ?m2310.0035 eV2 (unknown)
- Sin2 2?130.01 (unknown)
- This is the Barger, Marfatia, and Whisnant point
Ib. - ltE?gt 0.8 GeV is not optimum since I dont know
the true value in advance. - I can determine ?m223 from
- 1.27 ?m223L/E0?/2
- Where E0 is the corresponding null point
- Note that these figures ignore the effect of
Fermi motion in the target nuclei. - This would smear the distinct 3?/2 minimum.
?/2
22?m232 with Errors
- Same plot as previously shown.
- The near detector at 3 km and the far detector is
at 350 km. - The plot is made comparing quasi-elastic events
only. - E? is well measured for these events. No
corrections are necessary. - This should produce a solid measurement of ?m232.
23Barger, Marfatia and Whisnant Table
24Oscillation Signal
- The following transparencies will show
Quasi-Elastic event numbers for Solenoid and Horn
capture systems. They assume - 1 MW Proton Driver
- 50 kton detector at 350 km with charge
determination (Liquid Ar) - 5?107 second running period.
- For comparison we have 28 of the flux used in
Barger et al.
- We do not use a necessarily optimum L/E fixed
configuration for all cases since the true
oscillation parameters are not known in advance.
- We use the actual flux distribution, not a
monochromatic ? beam (as used in Barger et al.).
- The size of the ?e appearance signal will give a
?13 measurement since ?m132 ? ?m232 is measured
independently by the ?? disappearance.
25Going to Homestake
- Most of the transparencies shown are based on
Snowmass calculations for a far detector placed
near Cornell. - We can scale the number of events from these
calculations to estimate signals that would be
seen at Homestake. - Scale with detector mass
- Scale with 1/r2.
- Increasing the Proton Driver Power to 4 MW would
be very advantageous to a detector at Homestake.
0.38 if 1 MW
- With the eventual upgrade to a neutrino factory,
the Homestake detector would have a significant
event rate.
26Solenoid Capture System with 230 m Decay Tunnel
Table 1 Oscillation Signal Consider
?m2125?10-5 eV2, ?23?/4 and sin2
2?130.01 Using a 1 MW proton driver and
a 50 kton detector 350 kilometers away.
Experiment running for 5?107 seconds.
Solenoid capture system with ?e/?? flux
ratio1.9
??
?e Signal
?e BG
??
?e signal
?e BG
Ignores ?e BG oscillations
Significance ?e signal 3.3 s.d. ?e signal
1.3 s.d.
27Solenoid Capture System with 100 m Decay Tunnel
Table 1 Oscillation Signal Consider
?m2125?10-5 eV2, ?23?/4 and sin2
2?130.01 Using a 1 MW proton driver and
a 50 kton detector 350 kilometers away.
Experiment running for 5?107 seconds.
Solenoid capture system with ?e/?? flux
ratio1.1
??
?e signal
?e BG
??
?e signal
?e BG
Ignores ?e BG oscillation
Significance ?e signal 3.2 s.d. ?e signal
1.8 s.d.
28Horn Beam 200 m Decay Tunnel
E889 Horn Design
Table 1 Oscillation Signal Consider
?m2125?10-5 eV2, ?23?/4 and sin2
2?130.01 Using a 1 MW proton driver and
a 50 kton detector 350 kilometers away.
Experiment running for 5?107 seconds.
Horn capture system with ?e/?? flux ratio1.08
??
?e Signal
?e BG
??
?e signal
?e BG
Ignores ?e BG oscillations
Significance ?e signal 5.8 s.d.
29Anti ? Horn Beam 200 m Decay Tunnel
E889 Horn Design
Table 1 Oscillation Signal Consider
?m2125?10-5 eV2, ?23?/4 and sin2
2?130.01 Using a 1 MW proton driver and
a 50 kton detector 350 kilometers away.
Experiment running for 5?107 seconds.
Horn capture system with ?e/?? flux ratio1.04
??
?e Signal
?e BG
??
?e signal
?e BG
Ignores ?e BG oscillations
Significance ?e signal 2.2 s.d.
30Cosmic Ray Background
- This table shows the cosmic ray rates for a
detector placed on the surface. - The rate reduction factors come from the E889
proposal. - The events shown are scaled to the 350 km
detector mass and 5 Snowmass year running period. - The neutron background could be significantly
reduced by going 50-100 m underground if it is a
problem. - Placing the detector deep below ground in a mine
would be more advantageous for proton decay
experiments. - The residual cosmic ray background could be
reduced to 0.002 events at 600 m below ground.
31Backgrounds to ?e Appearance Signal
- The largest backgrounds to the ????e signal are
expected to be - ?e contamination in the beam.
- This was 1 ?e/?? flux ratio in the capture
configuration that was used in this study. This
yields a 2 in the event ratio. - Neutral Current ??oN events where the ?o are
misidentified as an electron. - If a ? from the ?o converts close to the vertex
(Dalitz decay) and is asymmetric. - The magnetic field and dE/dx will be helpful in
reducing this background. Simulation study is
necessary. - I estimate (guess) that this background is 0.001
of the ??oN signal.
32Conclusions
- A high intensity neutrino super beam maybe an
extremely effective way to study neutrino
oscillations. - In particular the 4 MW version of the super beam
may be the only way to observe CP violation in
neutrino oscillations without a Muon Ring
Neutrino Factory. - This experiment is directly competitive with the
JHF-Kamioka neutrino project. - Do we need two such projects? I will not answer
that!