Summary of the Reactor/  13 Meeting At College de France, Paris April 22-23, 2003 Thierry Lasserre On Behalf the reactor/  13 “european” working group.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Overview for an European Strategy for neutrino Physics Yves Déclais CNRS/IN2P3/UCBL IPN Lyon Measuring the neutrino mixing matrix Reactor experiments NUMI.
Advertisements

Double Chooz: Outer Veto
Controlling Systematics in a Future Reactor  13 Experiment Jonathan Link Columbia University Workshop on Future Low-Energy Neutrino Experiments April.
6/6/2003Jonathan Link, Columbia U. NuFact03 Future Measurement of sin 2 2  13 at Nuclear Reactors Jonathan Link Columbia University June 6, 2003 ′03.
Summary of Nufact-03 Alain Blondel NuFact 03 5th International Workshop on Neutrino Factories & Superbeams Columbia University, New York 5-11 June 2003.
Systematic errors of reactor neutrino experiments and ideas about new detectors Yifang Wang Institute of High Energy Physics, Beijing Nov.28, 2003.
Prototype of the Daya Bay Neutrino Detector Wang Zhimin IHEP, Daya Bay.
Past Experience of reactor neutrino experiments Yifang Wang Institute of High Energy Physics, Beijing Nov. 28, 2003.
Prospects for 7 Be Solar Neutrino Detection with KamLAND Stanford University Department of Physics Kazumi Ishii.
Daya Bay Neutrino Experiment
Summary of Nufact-03 Alain Blondel NuFact 03 5th International Workshop on Neutrino Factories & Superbeams Columbia University, New York 5-11 June 2003.
Christian Buck, MPIK Heidelberg LAUNCH 09 November, 11th 2009 The Double Chooz reactor neutrino experiment.
12 December 2003APS Neutrino StudyE. Blucher APS Neutrino Study: Reactor Working Group What can we learn from reactor experiments? Future reactor experiments.
The Double-Chooz project of experiment for the last undetermined mixing angle  13 Thierry Lasserre (Saclay & APC) & H. de Kerret (APC) 09/02/04, Paris.
Gd Liquid scintillator: completion of the R&D! Stability 0,1 % Gd in PXE LENS R&D  new metal β-diketone molecule (MPIK) Stable: 0.1% Gd-Acac (few months)
Neutron background and possibility for shallow experiments Tadao Mitsui Research Center for Neutrino Science, Tohoku University December, 2005 Neutrino.
Measuring  13 with Reactors Stuart Freedman University of California at Berkeley SLAC Seminar September 29, 2003.
1 The Daya Bay Reactor Electron Anti-neutrino Oscillation Experiment Jianglai Liu (for the Daya Bay Collaboration) California Institute of Technology APS.
Jun Cao Institute of High Energy Physics, Beijing Daya Bay Neutrino Experiment 3rd International Conference on Flavor Physics, Oct. 3-8, 2005 National.
Christian Buck, MPIK Heidelberg for the Double Chooz Collaboration LAUNCH March 23rd, 2007 The Double Chooz experiment.
Caren Hagner CSTS Saclay Present And Near Future of θ 13 & CPV in Neutrino Experiments Caren Hagner Universität Hamburg Neutrino Mixing and.
Eun-Ju Jeon Sejong Univ. Sept. 09, 2010 Status of RENO Experiment Neutrino Oscillation Workshop (NOW 2010) September 4-11, 2010, Otranto, Lecce, Italy.
Double Chooz A Reactor θ 13 Experiment M.Motoki Tohoku Univ. On behalf of the Double Chooz Collaboration Reactor θ 13 measurementReactor θ 13 measurement.
KamLAND : Studying Neutrinos from Reactor Atsuto Suzuki KamLAND Collaboration KEK : High Energy Accelerator Research Organization.
SYSTEMATICS (preliminary consideration) V. Sinev for Kurchatov Institute Neutrino group.
Using Reactor Anti-Neutrinos to Measure sin 2 2θ 13 Jonathan Link Columbia University Fermilab Long Range Planning Committee, Neutrino Session November.
Karsten M. Heeger US Reactor  13 Meeting, March 15, 2004 Comparison of Reactor Sites and  13 Experiments Karsten Heeger LBNL.
νeνe νeνe νeνe νeνe νeνe νeνe Distance (L/E) Probability ν e 1.0 ~1800 meters 3 MeV) Reactor Oscillation Experiment Basics Unoscillated flux observed.
Karsten Heeger, Univ. of WisconsinDNP2006, Nashville, October 28, 2006 A High-Precision Measurement of sin 2 2  13 with the Daya Bay Reactor Antineutrino.
Present and future detectors for Geo-neutrinos: Borexino and LENA Applied Antineutrino Physics Workshop APC, Paris, Dec L. Oberauer, TU München.
Kr2Det: TWO - DETECTOR REACTOR NEUTRINO OSCILLATION EXPERIMENT AT KRASNOYARSK UNDERGROUND SITE L. Mikaelyan for KURCHATOV INSTITUTE NEUTRINO GROUP.
L. Oberauer, Paris, June 2004   Measurements at Reactors Neutrino 2004 CdF, Paris, June chasing the missing mixing angle.
1 IDM2004 Edinburgh, 9 september 2004 Helenia Menghetti Bologna University and INFN Study of the muon-induced neutron background with the LVD detector.
Karsten Heeger, LBNL TAUP03, September 7, 2003 Reactor Neutrino Measurement of  13 Karsten M. Heeger Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.
Double-Chooz A search for  13 Guillaume MENTION (PCC-Collège de France/APC) On behalf of the Double-Chooz collaboration NOW 2004 Conca Specchiulla, Italy.
Results for the Neutrino Mixing Angle  13 from RENO International School of Nuclear Physics, 35 th Course Neutrino Physics: Present and Future, Erice/Sicily,
New Results from the Salt Phase of SNO Kathryn Miknaitis Center for Experimental Nuclear Physics and Astrophysics, Univ. of Washington For the Sudbury.
Karsten Heeger, LBNL NDM03, June 11, 2003 Future Reactor Neutrino Experiments Novel Neutrino Oscillation Experiments for Measuring the Last Undetermined.
Results from RENO Soo-Bong Kim (KNRC, Seoul National University) “17 th Lomosonov Conference on Elementary Particle Physics” Moscow. Russia, Aug ,
The Daya Bay Reactor Neutrino Experiment R. D. McKeown Caltech On Behalf of the Daya Bay Collaboration CIPANP 2009.
Performance Comparisons of Safeguard Detector Designs D. Reyna (Argonne National Laboratory) with help from R.W. McKeown (Drexel University)
Chasing  13 with new experiments at nuclear reactors Thierry Lasserre Saclay NuFact04, Osaka July
Karsten Heeger Beijing, January 18, 2003 Design Considerations for a  13 Reactor Neutrino Experiment with Multiple Detectors Karsten M. Heeger Lawrence.
Double Chooz Near Detector Guillaume MENTION CEA Saclay, DAPNIA/SPP Workshop AAP 2007 Friday, December 14 th, 2007
Jun Cao Jan. 18, 2004 Daya Bay neutrino experiment workshop (Beijing) Detector Module Simulation and Baseline Optimization ● Determine module geometric.
Daya Bay Reactor Neutrino Experiment On behalf of the DayaBay collaboration Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Joseph ykHor YuenKeung,
Measuring  13 with Reactors Stuart Freedman HEPAP July 24, 2003 Bethesda Reactor Detector 1Detector 2 d2d2 d1d1.
Summary of the workshop on Future Low-Energy Neutrino Experiments TUM, Munich, October 9-11, 2003 Thierry Lasserre CEA/Saclay, CERN, 20/11/2003.
Θ 13 and CP-Violation in the Lepton Sector SEESAW25 Institut Henri Poincaré, Paris Caren Hagner Universität Hamburg SEESAW25 Institut Henri Poincaré, Paris.
Double-CH  13  13 Z H. De Kerret (APC) On behalf the Double-Chooz proto-collaboration June
1 Muon Veto System and Expected Backgrounds at Dayabay Hongshan (Kevin) Zhang, BNL DayaBay Collaboration DNP08, Oakland.
  Measurement with Double Chooz IDM chasing the missing mixing angle e  x.
Karsten Heeger, Univ. of Wisconsin Yale University, March 1, 2010  13 from Global Fits current best limit sin 2 2θ 13 < CL Fogli, et al., arXiv:0905:3549.
1 LTR 2004 Sudbury, December 2004 Helenia Menghetti, Marco Selvi Bologna University and INFN Large Volume Detector The Large Volume Detector (LVD)
Recent Results from RENO NUFACT2014 August. 25 to 30, 2014, Glasgow, Scotland, U.K. Hyunkwan Seo on behalf of the RENO Collaboration Seoul National University.
CHOOZ  Double Chooz réalité  mythe ? Yves Déclais, IPNL (CNRS-IN2P3/UCBL) Questions (sur le bruit) de fond.
Double Chooz Optimizing Chooz for a possible Theta 13 measurement Steven Dazeley (Louisiana State University) NuFact05 Rome.
Double Chooz Experiment Status Jelena Maricic, Drexel University (for the Double Chooz Collaboration) September, 27 th, SNAC11.
IBD Detection Efficiencies and Uncertainties
The Double Chooz reactor neutrino experiment
SoLid: Recent Results and Future Prospects
Donato Nicolo` Pisa University & INFN,Pisa
Simulation for DayaBay Detectors
Neutron and 9Li Background Calculations
Calibration, Simulations, and “Remaining” Issues
The Braidwood Reactor Neutrino Experiment
Search for sterile neutrinos with SOX: Monte Carlo studies of the experiment sensitivity Davide Basilico 1st year Workshop – 11/10/17 Tutors: Dott. Barbara.
Anti-Neutrino Simulations
Daya Bay Neutrino Experiment
Davide Franco for the Borexino Collaboration Milano University & INFN
Presentation transcript:

Summary of the Reactor/  13 Meeting At College de France, Paris April 22-23, 2003 Thierry Lasserre On Behalf the reactor/  13 “european” working group CEA/Saclay Low energy Neutrino Workshop University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa May

European momentum Working group:  PCC & APC (from CHOOZ), CEA/Saclay  MPI Heidelberg  TU Munchen,  Kurchatov Institute  INFN/Bologna  First meeting in December 2002  Second meeting in April 2003  Next around the end of the summer ? Goal: Is it possible to build a set of 2 detectors to measure/constrain  13 with a new reactor experiment before ? Where ? What the optimum detector design ? Preliminary answer should come this year T. Lasserre

European momentum 22-23/04/03 Meeting : List of Participants  H. de Kerret (PCC+APC)  M. Obolinski (PCC+APC)  O. Dadoun (PCC+APC)  D. Vignaud (PCC+APC)  J. Lamblin (PCC+APC)  S. Schoenert (MPIK)  T. Knoepfle (MPIK)  L. Oberauer (TUM)  F. Von Feilitzsch (TUM)  C. Hagner (Virginia Polytechnic Institute)  T. Schwetz (TUM)  M. Selvi (INFN, Bologna)  M. Cribier (Saclay+APC)  C. Cavata (Saclay)  T.L (Saclay)  … T. Lasserre

Reactor/  13 meeting, Paris, 22-23/04/03 Tuesday 22 April 14h – 14h15 : Introduction 14h15 – 15h15 : Reactor Neutrino Experiments compared to Superbeams (Thomas Schwetz, TUM – 45’+15’) 15h15 – 16h00 : The CHOOZ experiment & the |Ue3|2 measurement – review of systematic errors. How and where to improve ? (H. de Kerret – 30’+15’) 16h00 – 16h30 : Coffee break 16h30 – 17h30 : Review of the current proposals (Kr2Det, Kashiwasaki, etc …) – Potential experiment sites in France ? (T. L – 45’+15’) 17h30 – 18h00 : Discussion Wednesday 23 April 9h00 - 9h30 : Analysis methods to account for near and far detectors – Systematic error handling (T. Schwetz, TUM, 30’) 09h30 – 10h15 : Discussion – Backgrounds: Accidental – Correlated – In-situ measurements (chaiperson: Stefan Schoenert) 10h15 – 10h45 : Coffee break 10h45 – 11h30 : Discussion - Detector design (chairperson: Lothar Oberauer) 11h30 – 12h30 : Conclusions

Parameter degeneracy in LBL experiments LBL  disappearance gives: sin 2 (2  23 )  2 solutions :  23 &  /2-  23 |  m 2 13 |  2 solutions m 1 >m 3 or m 3 >m 1 LBL appearance probability given by: K 1,K 2,K 3 : known constants (within experimental error) dependence on sin(2  23 ), sin(  23 )  2 solutions dependence on sign(  m 2 31 )  2 solutions  -CP phase can run in [0,2  ]  Interval of solutions in general P(   e ) ~ K 1 sin 2 (  23 ) sin 2 (2  13 ) + K 2 sin(2  23 ) sin(  13 ) sign(  m 2 31 ) cos(  )  K 3 sin(2  23 ) sin(  13 ) sin (  ) T. Lasserre |U e3 | 2 measurement with reactors Few MeV e  disappearance experiments 1-P( e  e ) = sin 2 (2  13 )sin 2 (  m 2 31 L/4E) + O(  m 2 21 /  m 2 31 ) Few MeV e + very short baseline  No matter effect contribution (O(10 -4 ) relative effect) |U e3 | 2  measurement independent of sign(  m 2 13 ) |U e3 | 2 measurement independent of the  -CP phase sin 2 (2  13 ) P(   e )

Achievable constraint on  13 with a reactor experiment (hep-ph/ , P. Huber et. al.) T. Schwetz

Achievable constraint on  13 with a reactor experiment (hep-ph/ , P. Huber et. al.) T. Schwetz

~30-50 tons detectors Complementarity Reactor/Superbeam (hep-ph/ , P. Huber et. al.) Reactor experiment slightly less sensitive to “non optimal”  m 2 31 LBL (JHF) rather sensitive to  m 2 21 (especially if LMA-II) T. Schwetz

Complementarity Reactor/Superbeam (hep-ph/ , P. Huber et. al.) Systematics Correlations & Degeneracies Reactor: dominated by systematics LBL: dominated by correlations and degeneracies T. Schwetz

The past: CHOOZ (H.D.K) Site: CHOOZ reactor, Ardennes (France) 2 cores: 2x4200 MWth Depth: 300 mwe 5 tons of liquid scintillator (gadolinium loaded) ~ 1 km Exclusion   e :  m 2 sol < 7x10 -4 eV 2 (90% CL) (slightly lower limit obtained at Palo-Verde) Best constraint on sin 2 (2  13 ) < 0.14 Spectre des positrons e + p  e + + n

CHOOZ Systematics (H.D.K) T. Lasserre Systematics From Error originCHOOZ 2 non-identical detectors 2 identical detectors 2 id. detectors + low accidentals Remarks Reactor Complex cross section/fission1.9%--- Power0.7%--- E/Fission0.6%---  2.1%<< 1% Detector Scint. Density0.1%---+difficult with Gd Target volume0.3%No cancellation- (  V) % H1.2%---+difficult with Gd Spill in/out1.0%No cancellation--Scint. buffer  2.5%<< 1% Analysis Cuts Ee+<8 Mev 6<En (MeV)<12 de+-geode<30cm dn-geode<30cm de+-n < 100 cm 2 < n delay < 100  s n multiplicity = 1 e+ energy0.8%No cancellation ?-No threshold  0%Scint. buffer e+ pos. cut / vessel (30cm)0.1%No cancellation ?-- n capture1.0%No cancellation ?--Scint buffer n energy0.4%No cancellation ?--Gd 8 MeV  ’s n pos. cut / vessel (30 cm)0.1%No cancellation ?-- (e+-n) distance0.3%No cancellation ?- No Distance cut  0% (e+-n) time delay0.4%No cancellation ?--No Gd  ~0% n multiplicity0.5%No cancellation ?-Much better  1.5%<< 1 % ? Be carfull: It is also possible to increase CHOOZ systematics (scintillating buffer for exemple) Detector design with 2 identical low background detectors  Overall systematics controlled at < 1%

Energy threshold effect  If E th > E min  systematics due to threshold  Lower threshold  lower backgrounds (accidental+correlated)  Advantage if E th < E min :  No systematics on energy threshold (0.8% in CHOOZ, xx% in KamLAND)  Start of the spectrum provides calibration point between near and far detctors  Allow to understand & measure background at low energy (<1 MeV) Positron Detection (H.D.K) T. Lasserre Edge effects: Interaction of close to the target volume  No scintillating buffer : One  ’s can escape without being detected  Energy calibration !  Scintillating buffer (CHOOZ case) : full energy of e+ always detected within the target  BUT e+ efficiency non zero outside the target volume  to control !  Spill in/out : compensation of loss and gain of efficiency near the vessel Cancel if near and far detector are identical Identical detector  No absolute energy scale needed To check: Light propagation around the vessel

Neutron Detection (H.D.K) T. Lasserre Gd loaded scintillator: To be or not to be ?  Gd  8 MeV  ’s  H 2  2.2 MeV  ’s Edge effect: H 2 scintillator + non-scintillating buffer  spill out  n-capture with target : decrease efficiency (  ’s escape)  spill in  n-capture outside target : increase efficiency (  ’s come back in target)  partial compensation = spill in/out (MC, 1% error in CHOOZ)  Cancel if near and far detector are identical Other reasons to have 2 identical detectors  Ratio Gd/H 2 capture (~80% on Gd) – Error will depend on detector geometry  Time capture on Gd: the tail has no reason to be exponential  Energy window for n capture on Gd/H 2

(e + - n) Tag (H.D.K) T. Lasserre Distance Cut: d(e+ - n)<100 cm  Position reconstruction is not a technique at the % level (tails) !  Position reconstruction was not in CHOOZ design  Not mandatory if accidental background very low  Lower accidental background: 1 systematic error less ! Time Cut: neutron capture on  Hydrogen: exponential behavior of neutron time capture (can be demonstrated)  Gadolinium: exponential behaviour ? Increase systematics  0.4% systematics in CHOOZ  Lower accidental background: no need of Gd ?

Accidental background rate: b acc ~ b p x b d x  x V coinc x V det  Goal: rate b acc < 1/year within a 20 tons PXE target detector  Case 1: with position reconstruction  V det = 1 m 3  Constraint b p.b d < s -2 m -6  CHOOZ systematics = 0.4%  Case 2: without position reconstruction  0% systematics  V det = V det  Constraint b p.b d < s -2 m -6 With Borexino material for estimation : b p b d = s -2 m -8 ! Position reconstruction no required but … at the limit … (Argument valid only for radioactivity in scint., buffer, material, etc …) b p, b d : specific prompt, delayed rate V det : detector volume 20m³  : coincidence time 1ms V coinc : coincidence volume 1m³ or V det Backgrounds from radioactivity Based on estimation done for the HLMA project, S.Schoenert, T.L, & L.Oberauer, Astropart.Phys. 18 (2003) Accidental background (S.S, L.O, T.L)

Detector Design: Scintillator T. Lasserre Unloaded scintillator provide best:  Optical properties (light yield, attenuation lenght)  Radiopurity  Stability  PSD !!! To fight fast neutron background Gd loaded scintillator  Shorten neutron capture time x~3  Helps only for accidental background  Increase neutron capture energy release to 8 MeV instead of 2.2 MeV on Hydrogen  Chemical stability (but CHOOZ, Palo-Verde, and LENS  > 5-8% loading)  Radiopurity ? More difficult  Gd/H neutron capture systematics  If Gd: same batch to be used for both detectors to avoid effect such as systematics on the Gd content of the near and far detectors … etc …

Detector Design: Buffer T. Lasserre Question: scintillating or non-sintillating buffer ? Scintillating  Help to get positron energy  No energy threshold  0% systematics !  Help to get neutron 2.2/8 MeV peak  BUT high activity in buffer due to PMTs 40 K  BUT high activity in buffer due to muons crossing the buffer (no shallow depth)  More expensive ?  Same fluor / wavelenght shifter? time constants ? Non-scintillating  Not the CHOOZ design  More difficult to understand positron + neutron spectrum ?  Increase of systematics : cut for energy threshold ! Light prop. around vessel !  Solution: scintillating buffer + encapsulated PMTs and deep detector site ?

Detector Design: Vessel(s) T. Lasserre Vessel(s) = separation between Target and Buffer Target Volume uncertainty:  Near detector : V near &  V near  Far detector: V far &  V far  Ideally V near = V far  systematics cancel but relative error ~ O(  V near -  V far ) Nylon Vessel (BOREXINO, KamLAND) : Should not be underestimated …  Volume & shape more difficult to control ?  Compatibility with PC  Buoyancy problems if slight density differences between target and buffer Plexigass Vessel  Volume & Shape well under control  Compatibility problems ?  Contains protons  act as a target Shape of the vessel : Spherical ? CHOOZ like ?

The 3-Volume detector (H.D.K) T. Lasserre CHOOZ: Gd-loaded scintillator + H scintillating buffer BOREXINO: H scintillator + Non-scintillating buffer 3V detector: H2/Gd loaded scintillator + Proton free scintillator + Non-scintillating buffer 3V detector: Gd Target + H2 sint. Buffer + Non-scintillating buffer A very nice detector, and easier to understand ?  See the start of the positron spectrum  No threshold effect for positron energy  n-capture peak very well defined  Target volume perfectly defined  No PMT activity seen (non scintillating buffer) Technically ?  Need to construct a 2-volume inner vessel  plexiglass  Proton free scintillator expensive  C 6 F 6 – Expensive ? – d = 1.6 (shielding, buoyancy problem)