Nov 18 – 22, 2024
America/New_York timezone

Detecting Charged-Current Neutrino-Nucleus Interactions on Oxygen in a Heavy Water Cherenkov Detector

Nov 20, 2024, 7:18 PM
1m
Ballroom (272) B/C (Student Union)

Ballroom (272) B/C

Student Union

Poster Presentation Poster Session

Speakers

Eli Ward (University of Tennessee Knoxville) Eli Ward (University of Tennessee Knoxville)

Description

At Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL), the COHERENT collaboration has built a heavy water Cherenkov detector to measure the neutrino flux coming from the Spallation Neutron Source (SNS) via the scattering of neutrinos on deuterium nuclei, with the primary aim of improving the precision of past and future CEvNS measurements. Detector construction was completed and measurements began in the summer of 2023. Although this heavy water Cherenkov detector was built primarily to measure the SNS neutrino flux, it can also be used to measure the cross section of neutrino-nucleus charged-current interactions on oxygen nuclei. Charged-current neutrino-oxygen reactions produce electrons that emit Cherenkov radiation within the detector. The SNS is the most powerful pulsed source of accelerator-based neutrinos in the world, which produces electron neutrinos in a similar energy range to supernova neutrinos. Thus the measurement of this charged-current neutrino reaction in oxygen can improve supernova neutrino detection. This neutrino-oxygen interaction has also never been experimentally measured in this energy range, and thus its measurement can be a test of nuclear models. This presentation describes methodology for detecting and measuring the cross section and event rate of this charged-current interaction between electron neutrinos and oxygen nuclei.

Primary author

Eli Ward (University of Tennessee Knoxville)

Presentation materials

There are no materials yet.