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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
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2 Contents Phenomenology Simulation tools Experiments and CP violation measurement CP precision measurement CPV from non-standard physics? Mass hierarchy measurement Summary
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Phenomenology (partly repetition from lecture)
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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
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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
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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)
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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)
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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 33 Best performance close to max. CPV ( CP = /2 or 3 /2)
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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.:
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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
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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
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16 The magic baseline
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Simulation tools
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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.
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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)
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Experiments and CP violation measurement
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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
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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
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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
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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/)
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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)
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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)
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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
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28 Example: Systematics (Tang, Winter, arXiv:0903.3039)
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CP precision measurement
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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
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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
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CPV from non-standard physics?
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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) 33 IDS-NF baseline 1.0
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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
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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
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Mass hierarchy (MH)
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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
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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:
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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
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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)
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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)
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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
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