Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

CP violation and mass hierarchy searches Neutrinos in particle physics and astrophysics (lecture) June 2009 Walter Winter Universität Würzburg TexPoint.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "CP violation and mass hierarchy searches Neutrinos in particle physics and astrophysics (lecture) June 2009 Walter Winter Universität Würzburg TexPoint."— Presentation transcript:

1 CP violation and mass hierarchy searches Neutrinos in particle physics and astrophysics (lecture) June 2009 Walter Winter Universität Würzburg TexPoint fonts used in EMF: AAAAA A A A

2 2 Contents  Phenomenology  Simulation tools  Experiments and CP violation measurement  CP precision measurement  CPV from non-standard physics?  Mass hierarchy measurement  Summary

3 Phenomenology (partly repetition from lecture)

4 4 Neutrino mixing with three flavors ( ) ( ) ( ) =xx (s ij = sin  ij c ij = cos  ij ) Potential CP violation From observations:  23,  12 large  13 small,  unknown Atmospheric mixingReactor mixingSolar mixing

5 5 Neutrino masses: three flavors  Normal or inverted mass ordering  Neutrino oscillations driven by |  m 31 2 | (atm.) >>  m 21 2 (solar)  Flavor content in mass eigenstate i given by |U  i | 2  Absolute mass scale unknown (< eV):  Tritium endpoint  Neutrinoless double beta decay  Cosmology 8 8 NormalInverted |U e3 | 2 ~ s 13 2

6 6  Three Flavors: six parameters (three angles, one phase; two independent mass squared differences)  Describes atmospheric, solar, reactor data in two flavor limits: Neutrino oscillations Coupling :  13 Atmospheric oscillations: Amplitude:  23 Frequency :  m 31 2 Solar oscillations : Amplitude:  12 Frequency :  m 21 2 Suppressed effect :  CP (Super-K, 1998; Chooz, 1999; SNO 2001+2002; KamLAND 2002)

7 7 Two flavor limits (lecture!)  Atmospheric neutrinos  Solar neutrinos Adiabatic evolution (MSW), mostly sensitive to  12  Reactor experiments  Atmospheric oscillation length (L ~ 1-2 km)  Solar oscillation length (L ~ 30-100 km)

8 8 Three flavor effects With the following definitions expand to second order in small quantities  and  13 : Test: for  = 0,  13 = 0: P e  = 0 Problem: The info has to be disentangled from this expression! Mass hierarchy! Quantities of interest Spectral terms

9 9 CP violation (CPV)  CP violation: Matter and antimatter behave „differently“ (in a well defined way including the peculiarities of the Standard Model, i.e., V-A interactions)  Necessary requirement for baryogenesis  Here: CP violation ~ Im (e i  ) ~ sin  CP  Define: we discover CP violation if we can exclude  CP = 0 and  (where sin  CP =0, or U is real) at the chosen confidence level

10 10 Terminology  Any value of  CP (except for 0 and  ) violates CP  Sensitivity to CPV: Exclude CP-conserving solutions 0 and  for any choice of the other oscillation parameters in their allowed ranges

11 11 CPV - statistics   2 (  12,  13,  23, ,  m 21 2,  m 31 2 )  For future experiments: we have to simulate data (O i ) assuming a set of (  12,  13,  23, ,  m 21 2,  m 31 2 ) implemented by nature: „true values“, „simulated values“ Mostly the unknown  13 and  relevant  Compute  2 (  13,  )=Min  12,  13,  23,  m212,  m312  2 (  12,  13,  23,0/ ,  m 21 2,  m 31 2,  13,  ) (marginalization over unwanted parameters)  Discovery potential as a function of (  13,  ) Our „theory“ (fit values), describe T i

12 12 CPV discovery reach … in (true) sin 2 2  13 and  CP Sensitive region as a function of true  13 and  CP  CP values now stacked for each  13 Read: If sin 2 2  13 =10 -3, we expect a discovery for 80% of all values of  CP No CPV discovery if  CP too close to 0 or  No CPV discovery for all values of  CP 33 Best performance close to max. CPV (  CP =  /2 or 3  /2)

13 13 Measurement of CPV (Cervera et al. 2000; Freund, Huber, Lindner, 2000; Huber, Winter, 2003; Akhmedov et al, 2004)  Antineutrinos:  Magic baseline:  Silver:  Platinum, Superb.:

14 14 Degeneracies  CP asymmetry (vacuum) suggests the use of neutrinos and antineutrinos Burguet-Castell et al, 2001)  One discrete deg. remains in (  13,  )-plane (Burguet-Castell et al, 2001)  Additional degeneracies: (Barger, Marfatia, Whisnant, 2001)  Sign-degeneracy (Minakata, Nunokawa, 2001)  Octant degeneracy (Fogli, Lisi, 1996) Best-fit Antineutrinos Iso-probability curves Neutrinos

15 15 Intrinsic vs. extrinsic CPV  The dilemma: Strong matter effects (high E, long L), but Earth matter violates CP  Intrinsic CPV (  CP ) has to be disentangled from extrinsic CPV (from matter effects)  Example:  -transit Fake sign-solution crosses CP conserving solution  Typical ways out:  T-inverted channel? (e.g. beta beam+superbeam, platinum channel at NF, NF+SB)  Second (magic) baseline (Huber, Lindner, Winter, hep-ph/0204352) NuFact, L=3000 km Fit True  CP (violates CP maximally) Degeneracy above 2  (excluded) True Critical range

16 16 The magic baseline

17 Simulation tools

18 18 GLoBES AEDL „Abstract Experiment Definition Language“ Define and modify experiments AEDL files User Interface C library, loads AEDL files Functionality for experiment simulation Simulation of future experiments http://www.mpi-hd.mpg.de/ lin/globes/ (Huber, Lindner, Winter, 2004; Huber, Kopp, Lindner, Rolinec, Winter, 2006) Application software linked with user interface Calculate sensitivities etc.

19 19 Event rate engine In practice: Secondary particles integrated out  Detector response R(E,E´) EE´ E: Incident neutrino energy E‘: Reconstructed energy E: Secondary particle energy (e.g. muon)

20 Experiments and CP violation measurement

21 21 There are three principle possibilities to artificially create neutrinos:  Beta decay:  Example: Nuclear fission reactors  Pion decay:  From accelerators:  Muon decay:  The muons are produced by pion decays! Muons, Neutrinos Reminder: „man-made“ neutrinos Protons TargetSelection, Focusing Pions Decay tunnel Absorber Neutrinos

22 22 Next generation experiments  Perspectives to constrain  13 and find CPV relatively weak  Focus on next-to-next generation! Example: Neutrino factory (Huber, Lindner, Schwetz, Winter, in prep.)  CL

23 23 Neutrino factory: International design study IDS-NF:  Initiative from ~ 2007- 2012 to present a design report, schedule, cost estimate, risk assessment for a neutrino factory  In Europe: Close connection to „Euro us“ proposal within the FP 07  In the US: „Muon collider task force“ ISS (Geer, 1997; de Rujula, Gavela, Hernandez, 1998; Cervera et al, 2000) Signal prop. sin 2 2  13 Contamination Muons decay in straight sections of a storage ring

24 24 IDS-NF baseline setup 1.0  Two decay rings  E  =25 GeV  5x10 20 useful muon decays per baseline (both polarities!)  Two baselines: ~4000 + 7500 km  Two MIND, 50kt each  Currently: MECC at shorter baseline (https://www.ids-nf.org/)

25 25 NF physics potential  Excellent  13, MH, CPV discovery reaches (IDS-NF, 2007)  Robust optimum for ~ 4000 + 7500 km  Optimization even robust under non-standard physics (dashed curves) (Kopp, Ota, Winter, arXiv:0804.2261; see also: Gandhi, Winter, 2007)

26 26 Experiment comparison  The sensitivities are expected to lie somewhere between the limiting curves  Example: IDS- NF baseline (~ dashed curve) (ISS physics WG report, arXiv:0810.4947, Fig. 105)

27 27 On near detectors@IDS-NF  Define near detectors including source/detector geometry:  Near detector limit: Beam smaller than detector  Far detector limit: Spectrum similar to FD  Compute spectrum, study systematical errors, study impact of physics (Tang, Winter, arXiv:0903.3039) ~ND limit~FD limit

28 28 Example: Systematics (Tang, Winter, arXiv:0903.3039)

29 CP precision measurement

30 30 Performance indicator: CP coverage  Problem:  CP is a phase (cyclic)  Define CP coverage (CPC): Allowed range for  CP which fits a chosen true value  Depends on true  13 and true  CP  Range: 0 < CPC <= 360   Small CPC limit: Precision of  CP  Large CPC limit: 360  - CPC is excluded range

31 31 CP pattern  Performance as a function of  CP (true)  Example: Staging. If 3000-4000 km baseline operates first, one can use this information to determine if a second baseline is needed (Huber, Lindner, Winter, hep-ph/0412199) Exclusion limitPrecision limit

32 CPV from non-standard physics?

33 33 ~ current bound CPV from non-standard interactions  Example: non-standard interactions (NSI) in matter from effective four-fermion interactions:  Discovery potential for NSI-CPV in neutrino propagation at the NF Even if there is no CPV in standard oscillations, we may find CPV! But what are the requirements for a model to predict such large NSI? (arXiv:0808.3583) 33 IDS-NF baseline 1.0

34 34  Effective operator picture: Describes additions to the SM in a gauge-inv. way!  Example: NSI for TeV-scale new physics d=6: ~ (100 GeV/1 TeV) 2 ~ 10 -2 compared to the SM d=8: ~ (100 GeV/1 TeV) 4 ~ 10 -4 compared to the SM  Current bounds, such as from CLFV: difficult to construct large (= observable) leptonic matter NSI with d=6 operators (except for   m, maybe) (Bergmann, Grossman, Pierce, hep-ph/9909390; Antusch, Baumann, Fernandez-Martinez, arXiv:0807.1003; Gavela, Hernandez, Ota, Winter,arXiv:0809.3451)  Need d=8 effective operators!  Finding a model with large NSI is not trivial! Models for large NSI? mass d=6, 8, 10,...: NSI

35 35 Systematic analysis for d=8  Decompose all d=8 leptonic operators systematically  The bounds on individual operators from non- unitarity, EWPD, lepton universality are very strong! (Antusch, Baumann, Fernandez-Martinez, arXiv:0807.1003)  Need at least two mediator fields plus a number of cancellation conditions (Gavela, Hernandez, Ota, Winter, arXiv:0809.3451) Basis (Berezhiani, Rossi, 2001) Combine different basis elements C 1 LEH, C 3 LEH Cancel d=8 CLFV But these mediators cause d=6 effects  Additional cancellation condition (Buchmüller/Wyler – basis) Avoid CLFV at d=8: C 1 LEH =C 3 LEH Feynman diagrams

36 Mass hierarchy (MH)

37 37 Motivation  Specific models typically come together with specific MH prediction (e.g. textures are very different)  Good model discriminator (Albright, Chen, hep-h/0608137) 8 8 NormalInverted

38 38  Magic baseline:  Removes all degeneracy issues (and is long!)  Resonance: 1-A  0 (NH:, IH: anti- ) Damping: sign(A)=-1 (NH: anti-, IH: )  Energy close to resonance energy helps (~ 8 GeV)  To first approximation: P e  ~ L 2 (e.g. at resonance)  Baseline length helps (compensates 1/L 2 flux drop) Matter effects (Cervera et al. 2000; Freund, Huber, Lindner, 2000; Huber, Winter, 2003; Akhmedov et al, 2004) Lecture:

39 39 Baseline dependence  Comparison matter (solid) and vacuum (dashed)  Matter effects (hierarchy dependent) increase with L  Event rate (, NH) hardly drops with L  Go to long L! (Freund, Lindner, Petcov, Romanino, 1999) (  m 21 2  0) Event rates (A.U.) Vacuum, NH or IH NH matter effect

40 40 Mass hierarchy sensitivity  For a given set of true  13 and  CP : Find the sgn-deg. solution  Repeat that for all true true  13 and  CP (for this plot)

41 41 Small  13 optimization: NF  Magic baseline good choice for MH  E  ~ 15 GeV sufficient (peaks at 8 GeV) (Huber, Lindner, Rolinec, Winter, 2006) (Kopp, Ota, Winter, 2008) E  -L (single baseline)L 1 -L 2 (two baselines)

42 42 Summary  CP violation measurement requires next-to- next generation of experiments  Example: Neutrino factory  Other relevant quantities:  CP precision measurement  CP violation from non-standard physics  Mass hierarchy  CP violation discovery in the lepton sector may be an interesting hint for leptogenesis! This talk at: http://www.physik.uni-wuerzburg.de/~winter/Teaching/neutrinos.html


Download ppt "CP violation and mass hierarchy searches Neutrinos in particle physics and astrophysics (lecture) June 2009 Walter Winter Universität Würzburg TexPoint."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google