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Title: MiniBooNE: Status and Plans.


1
MiniBooNEStatus and Plans.
2
Talk Outline
  • Motivation for MiniBooNE.
  • The MiniBooNE experiment
  • Description.
  • Current status.
  • First cosmic ray data.
  • Conclusions.

3
LSND and KARMEN
Signal above background 87.922.46.0
events Oscillation probability
(0.2640.0670.045)
KARMEN 2 partially excludes LSND region.
4
The Current Situation
LSND and KARMEN 2
5
So Whats the Problem?
  • Results from solar and atmospheric neutrino
    experiments indicate neutrino oscillations and
    give values of Dm2.
  • A neutrino model with only 3 active flavours
    cannot accommodate all the Dm2 values.
  • Either one or more of the experiments is wrong,
    or something is wrong with the 3 flavour neutrino
    oscillation model.

and it wouldnt be the first time.
6
So Whats the Problem?
  • The LSND result should be checked.

7
The BooNE Collaboration
  • Y. Liu, I. Stancu
  • University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, AL 35487
  • S. Koutsoliotas
  • Bucknell University, Lewisburg, PA 17837
  • E. Church, C. Green, G. J. VanDalen
  • University of California, Riverside, CA 92521
  • E. Hawker, R. A. Johnson, J. L. Raaf, N.
    Suwonjandee
  • University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH 45221
  • T. Hart, E. D. Zimmerman
  • University of Colorado, Boulder, CO 80309
  • L. Bugel, J. M. Conrad, J. Formaggio, J. Link,
  • J. Monroe, M. H. Shaevitz, M. Sorel
  • Columbia University, Nevis Labs, Irvington, NY
    10533
  • D. C. Cox, A. Green, S. McKenney, H. O. Meyer, R.
    Tayloe
  • Indiana University, Bloomington, IN 47405
  • G. T. Garvey, W. C. Louis, G. A. McGregor, G. B.
    Mills,
  • E. Quealy, V. Sandberg, B. Sapp,
  • R. Schirato, R. Van de Water, D. H. White
  • Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM
    87545
  • R. Imlay, W. Metcalf, M. Sung, M. O. Wascko
  • Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA 70803
  • J. Cao, Y. Liu, B. P. Roe
  • University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109
  • O. Bazarko, P. D. Meyers, R. B. Patterson,
  • F. C. Shoemaker, H. A. Tanaka
  • Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544

8
Enter MiniBooNE
The Booster Neutrino Experiment
Proposed summer 1997. The goal to confirm, or
exclude, the LSND result and extend the explored
oscillation parameter space.
  • High statistics 10 LSND.
  • Different systematics beam energy 10 LSND,
    event signatures and backgrounds different.
  • Anticipated gt5s significance over entire LSND
    region.

9
MiniBooNE Overview
The FNAL Booster delivers 8 GeV protons to the
MiniBooNE beamline. The protons hit a beryllium
target producing pions and kaons. The magnetic
horn focuses the secondary particles towards the
detector. The mesons decay, and the neutrinos
fly to the detector.
  • Signal from pm nm then nm ne which
    produces e- in the detector.

10
The FNAL Booster
  • an accelerator in its 30s!

Built to deliver 8 GeV protons to the Main Ring.
It now supplies the Main Injector, and will soon
also supply the MiniBooNE beamline.
  • Run II and MiniBooNE require
  • 5.7Hz beam _at_ 51012 ppp (5Hz to MiniBooNE).
  • 7.5Hz power equipment capability.
  • This corresponds to 51020 protons per year to
    MiniBooNE.
  • The Booster must run at record intensity to meet
    these goals.

11
The MiniBooNE Beamline
  • The 8 GeV beamline is complete, and protons have
    been successfully transported to the target area.

12
The Target and Horn
The horn focuses secondary particles produced in
the Be target using a torroidal magnetic
field. 170kA for 140msec _at_ 5Hz.
  • Tested to 10 million pulses.

13
The MiniBooNE Detector
  • 12 m diameter detector.
  • 250,000 gallons of mineral oil.
  • Optically isolated inner region with 1280 8"
    PMTs, giving 10 coverage.
  • Outer veto region of 240 8" PMTs.
  • Currently taking cosmic ray and calibration data.

14
n Flux at the Detector
  • Non-negligible intrinsic ne background this will
    be measured.

15
Beam Backgrounds
Secondary particle production from 8 GeV protons
on an actual MiniBooNE target will be measured at
HARP.
16
Beam Backgrounds
17
Event Signatures
Hit pattern from Cerenkov light used to determine
event type.
ideal ring
  • mis-ID backgrounds when
  • muons scatter excessively.
  • rings from pion decay overlap, or only one ring
    is produced.

18
Some Events
19
Muon Decay Candidate
Each frame is 25 ns with 10 ns steps.
Charge (Size)
Time (Colour)
20
Michel Events
Fit lifetime of 2.12 0.05 msec. Expect 2.13
msec with 8 m- capture on carbon.
21
Hit Time Distribution
Michel electrons can be used to determine PMT
timing resolution and scintillation time constant.
22
Calibration Underway
Laser flasks provide PMT charge and timing
calibration and a means to monitor the oil
attenuation length in situ.
Muon tracker above detector and 7 optically
isolated scintillator cubes in the detector
provide cross checks for energy estimation and
reconstruction algorithms.
23
Expected ne Signal
from 1021 protons on target (2 years).
500,000 nmC charged current events.
Approximate numbers.
24
MiniBooNE Sensitivity
MiniBooNE should be able to cover the entire LSND
region in two years.
25
Conclusions
  • Milestones
  • May 3rd - detector full of oil.
  • June 26th - first beam delivered to target
    position.
  • Any day! - first beam on target.
  • Full beam / horn / detector commissioning to
    follow.

26
MiniBooNEStatus and Plans.
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