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G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 What Have We Learned from Super-K? –Before Super-K –SK-I (1996-2001) Atmospheric Solar –SNO & SK-I Active solar –SK.

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Presentation on theme: "G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 What Have We Learned from Super-K? –Before Super-K –SK-I (1996-2001) Atmospheric Solar –SNO & SK-I Active solar –SK."— Presentation transcript:

1 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 What Have We Learned from Super-K? –Before Super-K –SK-I (1996-2001) Atmospheric Solar –SNO & SK-I Active solar –SK Accident Rebuild Greg Sullivan University of Maryland

2 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 Why Super-Kamiokande? Solar Neutrinos “Problem” –3 experiments showed a deficit of solar neutrinos. Going back ~30 years –About ½ of the expected number were observed –results can not be reconciled with the standard solar model Atmospheric Neutrino “Anomaly” – IMB and Kamiokande saw less than expected ratio of    e One Proposed Explanation was: Neutrino Oscillations –Solar neutrinos might be e   –Atmospheric neutrinos might be   

3 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 Neutrino Oscillations If neutrinos oscillate then “mixing” must occur between different type of neutrinos. Weak eigenstates of the neutrino are mixtures of the neutrinos with definite mass. – mass is not 0 and flavor is not absolutely conserved! Probability of electron neutrino to remain electron flavor Matter Effects will alter this vacuum expression –MSW effect

4 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 Super-Kamiokande Detector  Detector Characteristics  41 m h x 39 m dia.  50,000 ton (22,000 ton fiducial)  11,200 20” PMTs inner detector  1,850 8” PMTs anti- detector  40% photo-cathode coverage

5 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 Super-Kamiokande

6 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 Detecting neutrinos Electron or muon track Cherenkov ring on the wall The pattern tells us the energy and type of particle We can easily tell muons from electrons

7 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 A muon going through the detector

8 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 A muon going through the detector

9 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 A muon going through the detector

10 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 A muon going through the detector

11 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 A muon going through the detector

12 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 A muon going through the detector

13 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 Stopping Muon

14 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 Stopping Muon – Decay Electron

15 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 Atmospheric Neutrino Production Ratio predicted to ~ 5% Absolute Flux Predicted to ~20% :

16 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 Atmospheric Oscillations about 13,000 km about 15 km Neutrinos produced in the atmosphere We look for transformations by looking at s with different distances from production SK

17 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 Atmospheric Neutrino Interactions Reaction Thresholds Electron: ~1.5 MeV Muon: ~110 MeV Tau: ~3500 MeV Charged Current Neutral Current e  e n p W +

18 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 Telling particles apart MuonElectron

19 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 Muon - Electron Identification PID Likelihood sub-GeV, Multi- GeV, 1-ring Monte Carlo (no oscillations) We expect about twice as many  as e

20 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 Super-K Atmospheric Data Set 1289.4 days of data (22.5 kilotons fiducial volume) Data Set is divided into: –Single and Multi Ring events –Electron-like and Muon-like –Energy Intervals 1.4 GeV Also E vis < 400MeV (little or no pointing) –Fully or partially contained muons (PC) –Upward going muons - stopping or through going Data is compared to Atmospheric Monte Carlo –Angle (path length through earth) –Visible energy of the Lepton

21 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 Low Energy Sample No Oscillations Oscillations (1.0, 2.4x10 -3 eV 2 )

22 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 Moderate Energy Sample

23 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 Multi-GeV Sample Oscillations (1.0, 2.4x10 -3 eV 2 ) No Oscillations UP going DownUPDown

24 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 Multi-Ring Events

25 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 Upward Going Muons

26 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 Summary of Atmospheric Results Best Fit for  to  Sin 2 2  =1.0,  M 2 =2.4 x 10 -3 eV 2  2 min =132.4/137 d.o.f. No Oscillations  2 min =316/135 d.o.f. 99% C.L. 90% C.L. 68% C.L. Best Fit Compelling evidence for  to  atmospheric neutrino oscillations

27 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 Tau vs Sterile Neutrino Analysis

28 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 Tau Appearance? Tau’s require greater than 3 GeV in neutrino energy –This eliminates most events Three correlated methods were used –All look for enhanced upward going multi-ring events All show slight evidence for Tau appearance None are statistically significant

29 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 The  0 sample For  to s the rate of NC events is reduced as compared to  to  which is the same as no oscillations. The SK NC enriched sample is only about 1/3 from NC interactions. The  0 sample is the cleanest NC signal Until K2K the error in  (  0 ) (~1-2 Gev) has been as large as the effect!

30 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002  0 Peaks

31 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 New Results

32 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 Neutrinos From Solar Reactions

33 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 The Solar Neutrino Problem

34 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 Oscillation Parameter Space LMA LOW VAC SMA

35 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 Expected Day – Night Asymmetry Bahcall

36 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 Solar Neutrinos in Super-K The ratio of NC/CC cross section is ~1/6.5 W e - e e - e - Charged Current (electron ’s only)

37 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 Solar Neutrinos in Super-K Super-K measures: –The flux of 8 B solar neutrinos (electron type) –Energy, Angles, Day / Night rates, Seasonal variations Super-K Results: –We see the image of the sun from 1.6 km underground –We observe a lower than predicted flux of solar neutrinos (45%)

38 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 Low Energy Electron in SK

39 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 Solar Neutrinos From Sun Toward Sun SSM: Bachall 2000 Flux: 8 B 5.05x10 6 /cm 2 /s Spectrum Ortiz et al

40 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 Global Flux allowed parameter space

41 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 Energy Spectrum

42 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 Energy Spectrum

43 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 Day / Night - BP2000+New 8 B Spectrum Preliminary

44 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 Seasonal Variation

45 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 Combined Results

46

47 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 SNO Results - Summer 2001 SNO measures just e SK measures mostly e but also other flavors (~1/6 strength) From the difference we see oscillations! } This is from  &  neutral current

48 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 Combining SK and SNO SNO measures  e = (35 ± 3 )%  ssm SK Measures  es = (47 ±.5 ± 1.6)%  ssm No Oscillation to active neutrinos: –~3  difference If Oscillation to active neutrinos: –SNO Measures just  e This implies that    ssm (~2/3 have oscillated) –SK measures  es =(  e + (    /6.5) Assuming osc. SNO predicts that SK will see  es ~ (35%+ 65%/6.5)  ssm = 45% ± 3%  ssm

49 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 SK & SNO Flux Measurements

50 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 Super-K Repairs in Summer 2001

51 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 Super-K Disaster - Nov 12, 2001 Chain reaction destroyed 7000 ID and 1000 OD Tubes The cause is not completely understood, but it started with a bottom pmt collapse. The energy release comes from a 4 T column of water falling There are plans to rebuild…

52 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 Disaster (Continued)

53 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 Disaster (Continued)

54 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 Disaster (Continued)

55 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 Rebuild at ½ of Original Coverage

56 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 What Have We Learned? Neutrinos undergo flavor oscillations –Neutrinos have mass –Flavor mixing 3 mixing angles, 2  m 2 & 1 mass (or 3 masses) Atmospheric –Maximal mixing (   ) –  m 23 2 ~ 2 x 10 -3 eV 2 Solar –Looks like active not sterile neutrinos –  m 12 2 ~ ? –   Mixing angle ?

57 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 What We’ll Hopefully Know Soon Kamland, Borexino,SNO,SK,Cl,Ga –Which solution for solar neutrinos first  m 12 2 first   Accelerator (MINOS, JHF, K2K,…) –Better  m 23 2, better   –First measurement of   If    not zero –CP Violation in neutrinos possible

58 G. Sullivan - Princeton - Mar 2002 Questions Neutrino Mass –Majorana or Dirac? Lepton Number Violation? GUTs? –What is the absolute Mass Scale? Why neutrinos have such small mass? Which mass Hierarchy of 3 mass states? Cosmology? Mixing Matrix –Why mixing structure different then CKM in quarks? GUTs? –CP Violation?


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