Back to Search
Start Over
Testing Explanations of Short Baseline Neutrino Anomalies
- Publication Year :
- 2022
-
Abstract
- The experimental observation of neutrino oscillations profoundly impacted the physics of neutrinos, from being well understood theoretically to requiring new physics beyond the standard model of particle physics. Indeed, the mystery of neutrino masses implies the presence of new particles never observed before, often called sterile neutrinos, as they would not undergo standard weak interactions. And while neutrino oscillation measurements entered the precision era, reaching percent-level precision, many experimental results show significant discrepancies with the standard model, at baselines much shorter than typical oscillation baselines, like LSND, MiniBooNE, gallium experiments, and reactor antineutrino measurements. These short baseline anomalies could be explained by the addition of a light sterile neutrino, with mass in the $1-10~\text{eV}$ range, however, in strong tension with many null experimental observations. Other explanations that rely on sterile neutrinos with masses in the $1-500~\text{MeV}$ could resolve the tension. Here we test both classes of models. On the one hand, we look for datasets collected at a short baseline which can constrain heavy sterile neutrino models. We find that the minimal model is fully constrained, but several extensions of this model could weaken the current constraint and be tested with current and future datasets. On the other hand, we test the presence of neutrino oscillations at short baselines, induced by a light sterile state, with the data collected by the MicroBooNE experiment, a liquid argon time projection chamber specifically designed to resolve the details of each neutrino interaction. We report null results from both analyses, further constraining the space of possible explanations for the short baseline anomalies. If new physics lies behind the short baseline anomaly puzzle, it is definitely not described by a simple model.<br />Comment: PhD thesis
- Subjects :
- High Energy Physics - Experiment
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology
Subjects
Details
- Database :
- arXiv
- Publication Type :
- Report
- Accession number :
- edsarx.2209.13455
- Document Type :
- Working Paper