What Is A Neutrino

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 43

Neutrino Physics

Whats a Neutrino and How does it Interact?

CTEQ SS09
Jorge G. Morfn
Fermilab
1

Objectives of this Lecture

Birth of Neutrino Physics

Growing Pains - the puzzles come much more rapidly than the
solutions

Vocabulary of Neutrino Oscillation Physics

Where do we stand today with neutrino oscillations - the current


challenges

Now that we know - pretty much - what a neutrino is, how do


neutrinos interact with matter and contribute to QCD studies

Neutrinos Are Everywhere!


Neutrinos outnumber ordinary matter particles in the Universe
(electrons, protons, neutrons) by a huge factor.

Depending on their masses they may account for a fraction


(% or two?) of the dark matter

Neutrinos are important for stellar dynamics: ~ 6.61010 cm-2s-1


stream through the Earth from the sun. Neutrinos also govern
Supernovae dynamics, and hence heavy element production.

To understand the nature of the Universe in which we


live we must understand the properties of the neutrino.
3

A bit of history 1930 - Wolfgang Pauli

Dear Radioactive Ladies and Gentlemen.

Within a year Pauli was


under analysis with C. Jung
N. Bohr suggested energy not conserved in decays
L. Meitner proposed - loses energy through secondary
interactions in nulceus yielding gamma rays

First Calculation of Neutrino Cross Sections


Bethe-Peierls (1934): calculation of first cross-section for inverse
beta reaction using Fermis theory for:
yields:

or

This means that the mean free path of a neutrino in water is:

Experimentalists groaned - need a very intense


source of s to detect inverse Beta decay 5

Project Poltergeist from 1951

They Finally Found the Right Source Experimental Detection of the Neutrino
In nuclear reactors fission of 92U235 produces chain of beta reactions

1
26 YEARS LATER!!

Reines and Cowan detect in 1953 (Hanford) (discovery confirmed 1956 in Savannah River)
1) Detection of two back-to-back s from prompt signal e+e--> at t=0.
2) Neutron thermalization: neutron capture in Cd, emission of late s

= (11 2.6) x 10-44 cm2 (within 5% of expected)

Existence of second neutrino established in 1962 by Schwartz, Lederman


and Steinberger at Brookhaven National Laboratory

First direct evidence for the third (and last?) neutrino - - by the DONUT
collaboration at Fermilab in 2000
7

Where the Puzzles StartSolar Neutrinos


1012 solar s/sec pass through your brain

Nuclear reactions in the core of the sun produce


e and only e.
In 1968, Ray Davis Homestake experiment measured the
higher-E part of the e flux e that arrives at earth using a
37Ar + ehuge tank of cleaning fluid and e + 37Cl
Theorists, especially John Bahcall, calculated the produced
e solar flux vs. E and predicted that Davis should see
36 Ar atoms per month.
e (Homestake)
e (Theory)

= 0.34 0.06
8

What was going on?


The Possible Solutions:
The theory was wrong.
The experiment was wrong.
Both were wrong.
The most radical - NEITHER was wrong.
2/3 of the solar e flux disappears on the way to earth
(changes into something that the Homestake experiment could not see).

Next Puzzle - Atmospheric Neutrinos

2 GeV cosmic rays hit the earth isotropically, and we expect:

(Up)
1.0
(Down)

However, Super-Kamiokande (50 kT water) found for E > 1.3 GeV


(Up)

= 0.54 0.04 .

(Down)

10

Resolution of the Atmospheric Neutrino Anomaly

Upward-going muon neutrinos depleted, while upwardgoing electron neutrinos slightly higher than expected

VERY suggestive of Neutrino Oscillations


Green curve in above figures

11

Resolution of Solar Neutrino Puzzle:


Neutrinos Change Flavor Between the Sun and the Earth
Sudbury Neutrino Observatory (SNO) measures (high E part):
sol d e p p e

Smiling John

sol d n p e + + Total sol flux

= 0.340 0.023 (stat) 0.030 (syst)


e + +

Total Flux of Neutrinos


SNO: e + + = (4.94 0.21 0.36) 106/cm2sec
Theory:

total = (5.69 0.91) 106/cm2sec

BOTH RAY DAVIS AND JOHN BAHCALL WERE RIGHT


Oscillation Hypothesis confirmed by KamLAND Reactor Results
12

What are Neutrino Oscillations ?

Difference between:

flavor states; L interacts with matter it yields a charged lepton of flavor L and
Mass states; L need not be a mass eigenstate but rather a superposition of mass
eigenstates, at least 3 mass eigenstates and perhaps more.

l = U lm m
m

The Ulm are known as the leptonic mixing matrix U.


If l is a superposition of several mass states with differing masses which cause
them to propagate differently, we have neutrino oscillations.
The amplitude for the transformation L --> L is:

A( l l ' ) = A( l is m )A(m propagates)A( m is l' )


M2m L
A(m propagates) = exp -i
2 E
13

Oscillating between two different types of

14

Neutrino Oscillation: continued

As an example, if there are only two flavors involved in the oscillations then the
U matrix takes on the following form and the probability (square of the
amplitude) can be expressed as:
i
cos
e
sin
and
U = -i
e sin
cos

L(km)
2
2
P( l l ' ) = sin 2 sin 1.27m (eV )
E(GeV)

with m2 M22 - M21


Life is more complicated with 3 flavors, but the principle is the same and we get
bonus of possible CP violations as in the quark sector P( --> e) P( --> e).

The components of U now involve 13 , 23 ,12 and and the probabilities involve
m13 , m23 and m12 .
15

Basic 3-flavor Oscillation Phenomenology

cij = cosij
sij = sinij
Solar
Atmospheric CP Violation

????

16

The Neutrino Mixing matrix is quite different than


the standard quark mixing matrix - why?

17

How are experimental


neutrino oscillation results presented?

Solar
m12 = (7.9 0.3) x 10-5 eV2
sin212 = (0.31 .03)

Solar + KamLAND

Atmospheric
m23 = (2.2 +.37-.27) x 10-3 eV2
sin223 = (0.50 .06)

SuperK + K2K

e
/ Osc.
m13 m23

sin213 < 0.046 (3)

Chooz
18

Latest MINOS Results - 3.3x1020 POT

19

Sum of our knowledge to date


sin213
2

}m2sol

m2atm

(Mass)2
2

or

m2atm

}m2sol

sin213

Inverted

Normal
m2sol = ~ 8 x 105 eV2,
e [|Uei|2]

m2atm = ~ 2.5 x 103 eV2

[|Ui|2]

[|Ui|2]

20

Where Does This Come From?


Bounded by reactor exps. with L ~ 1 km
+

From max. atm. mixing, 3


2

{
{

From (Up)oscillate
but (Down) dont

m2atm

(Mass)2
2

m2

In LMAMSW, Psol(e e)
= e fraction of 2

sol

{
e [|Uei|2]

From distortion of e(solar)


and e(reactor) spectra

From max. atm. mixing, 1+ 2


includes ()/2
[|Ui|2]

[|Ui|2]

21

Neutrino Oscillations:
Current Challenges: Where are we going from here?

The dominant oscillation parameters will be known reasonably well from


solar/reactor and from SuperK, K2K, MINOS, CNGS

The physics issues to be investigated are clearly delineated:

Increase the precision on the Solar and Atmospheric parameters - is 23 exactly


45??

Need measurement of missing oscillation probability (13 = e)


Need determination of mass hierarchy (sign of m13)
Search for CP violation in neutrino sector
Measurement of CP violation parameters - phase
Testing CPT with high precision

Above can be accomplished with the e transition.


How do we measure this sub-dominant oscillation?
13 small ( 0.1) - maximize flux at the desired energy (near oscillation max)
Minimize backgrounds - narrow energy spectrum around desired energy
One wants to be below threshold to measure subdominant oscillation 22

P( e) on one slide (3 generations)

Solar

P(_e)%

Atmospheric

Minakata & Nunokawa JHEP 2001

P( e)=P1+P2+P3+P4

Atmosphericsolar interference

The is or
23

Fine, we think we know what a neutrino IS


How do we use them to study QCD?

24

Fermi Theory - Current-Current Interaction


1934 Paper rejected by Nature because it contains speculations too remote from
reality to be of interest to the reader!!
Developed by Fermi in 1932 to describe nuclear -decay inspired by the
success of current-current description of electromagnetic interactions:
J(p)

M em

J(N)

J(e)

J(e)

= eu p u p 2 eu e ue
q

)(

MCC = G u n u p u ue

Weak interactions are maximally parity violating:

J u (1 5 )ue

Only left-handed fermions, and right-handed anti-fermions, participate in the


CC weak interaction!

)
25

How does Neutrino Scattering Contribute


to Studies of QCD?

QCD Factorization means that we can treat the scattering and later processes
separately, they occur on very different timescales:

hard scatter: fast


fragmentation: slow
Justification for summing probabilities
rather than amplitudes for q scattering.

Justification for QCD factorization and other aspects of the parton model
come from formal approaches, namely the operator product expansion of
the hadronic tensor.

26

The Cross section for DIS

The structure functions can also


be written in terms of the cross
sections for absorption of different
polarization states of the exchanged
boson.

Callen-Gross relation: F2 = 2xF1


(R=0)

ignoring lepton mass terms which bring in 3 additional structure functions.

27

-quark Scattering

From our discussion of neutrino-electron scattering we found that the helicity


combinations (LL,RR = q, q) are J=0 combinations with flat-y dependence,
and LR,RL combinations (q, q) are J=1 combinations with (1-y)2
dependence.

From weak-isospin we see that neutrinos


scatter from T3=-1/2, anti-nu from T3=+1/2

d p G 2 s
=
xd(x) + xs(x)+ xu(x)(1 y) 2
dxdy

d p G 2 s
=
xd(x)+ xs(x) + xu(x)(1 y) 2
dxdy

(ignoring c, b,t quarks., c quark mass)

q contribution

28

Structure Functions and PDFs


F2 , = 2 x(Qi (x)+ Qi (x))
i

xF3 , = 2 x(Qi (x) Qi (x))


i
Parton

distributions are usually written for


the proton, neutron PDFs are given by
isospin symmetry: un(x) = dp(x) etc.

Since

we are usually scattering from targets


with roughly equal numbers of neutrons and
protons it is often convenient to talk about
scattering from an isoscalar target.
=(p+n)/2

For

targets like iron with a neutron excess a


small correction is applied to achieve this.

WA25 - CERN

29

Neutrino Structure Functions Wonderfully Efficient


in Isolating Quark Flavors
Recall Neutrinos have the ability to directly resolve flavor of the nucleons constituents:
interacts with d, s, u, and c while interacts with u, c, d and s.
Using Leading order expressions:

F 2 (x,Q 2) = x u + u + d + d +2s + 2c
F 2 (x,Q 2) = x u + u + d + d +2s+ 2c

[
[

]
]
xF 3 (x,Q 2 ) = x[ u + d - u - d - 2s + 2c]
xF 3 (x,Q 2 ) = x[ u + d - u - d +2s - 2c]

Taking combinations of the Structure functions

F 2 - xF 3 = 2(u + d + 2c) = 2U + 4c
F 2 - xF 3 = 2(u + d + 2s ) = 2U + 4s
xF 3 - xF 3 = 2[(s + s ) (c + c)] = 4s - 4c

30

Structure Function Extraction


d A
G F2
=
2
2x
dxdQ

2
1 A

1
y
(
)
2
A
2
A
2
A
2
F
(x,Q
)
+
xF
(x,
Q
)
+
F
(x,
Q
)

xF
(x,
Q
)
3
2
3
2 2

+ y2 FL

d A
G F2 1 A
( 1 y )2 A
2
A
2
2
A
2
=
F
(x,Q
)

xF
(x,
Q
)
+
F
(x,
Q
)
+
xF
(x,
Q
)
2
3
2
3

2
dxdQ2 2x 2

x,Q 2,(1 y)2

G 2 2x

Neutrino
Statistical + 5% systematic

Anti-Neutrino
Statistical only

X = 0.1 - 0.125
Q2 = 2 - 4 GeV2

R = Rwhitlow

Meant to give an impression


only!
Kinematic cuts in (1-y) not
shown.

(1-y)2
31

Momentum Distributions and Parton


Universality

It is straightforward to relate
the structure functions from
charged lepton and neutrino
scattering.

The fact that they are in


good agreement justifies
earlier claims of parton
universality!

32

QCD and Scaling Violations

At higher order in QCD the nucleon looks somewhat different

Calculations of the structure functions in terms of parton


distributions now are somewhat more complicated and
involve the splitting functions
Pqq(x/y) = probability of finding a quark with momentum x within a quark
with momentum y
Pgq(x/y) = probability of finding a quark with momentum x within a gluon
with momentum y.

33

QCD and scattering

QCD therefore predicts the Q2 evolution of the structure functions in terms of


the coupling s.

34

Heavy Quark Production

Production of heavy quarks like charm


requires a re-examination of the
parton kinematics:
2

(q + p) = m

2
c

q 2 + 2p q + 2 M 2 = mc2

2
c

Q +m
Q +m

=
2M
Q2 / x
mc2
x1+ 2
Q

2
c

slow rescaling - The effects of the


~ 1 GeV charm mass are not negligible
even at 100 GeV neutrino energy.
Charm identified through decays to +,
di-muon events allow measurement of:
CKM matrix elements
mc - from threshold behavior
s and sbar quark distributions

35

Latest Scattering Results - NuTeV


Martin Tzanov
The NuTeV Experiment at Fermilab the most recent neutrino experiment to
investigate QCD:
NuTeV accumulated over 3 million / events with 20 E 400 GeV.
NuTeV considered 23 systematic uncertainties.
NuTeV agrees with charge lepton data for x < 0.5.
Perhaps smaller nuclear correction at high-x for neutrino scattering.
NuTeV F2 and xF3 agrees with theory for medium x.
At low x different Q2 dependence.
At high x (x>0.6) NuTeV is systematically higher.

36

NuTeV F2 Measurement on Iron


Isoscalar -Fe F2
NuTeV F2 is compared with
CCFR and CDHSW results
the line is a fit to NuTeV data
All systematic uncertainties
are included
All data sets agree for x<0.4.
At x>0.4 NuTeV agrees with
CDHSW
At x>0.4 NuTeV is
systematically above CCFR

37

Comparison with Theory for F2


Baseline is TRVFS(MRST2001E)
NuTeV and CCFR F2 are compared to
TRVFS(MRST2001E)
F2NuTeV F2TRVFS
Theoretical models shown are:
- ACOT(CTEQ6M)
- ACOT(CTEQ5HQ1)
- TRVFS (MRST2001E)

F2TRVFS

Theory curves are corrected for:


- target mass (H. Georgi and H. D. Politzer,
NuTeV F2 agrees with theory for medium x.
At low x different Q2 dependence.
At high x >0.6) NuTeV is systematically higher.
nuclear effects parameterization from charge
lepton data, assumed to be the same for neutrino
scattering ---- WRONG!
38

NuTeV xF3 Measurement on Fe


Isoscalar

-Fe xF3

NuTeV xF3 is compared with


CCFR and CDHSW results
- the line is a fit to NuTeV data
All systematic uncertainties are
included
All data sets agree for x<0.4.
At x>0.4 NuTeV agrees with
CDHSW
At x>0.4 NuTeV is systematically
above CCFR
39

Comparison with Theory for xF3


Baseline is TRVFS(MRST2001E).
NuTeV and CCFR xF3 are compared to
TRVFS(MRST2001E)

xF3NuTeV xF3TRVFS
Theoretical models shown are: xF TRVFS
3

- ACOT(CTEQ6M)
- ACOT(CTEQ5HQ1)
- TRVFS (MRST2001E)

theory curves are corrected for:


- target mass (H. Georgi and H. D. Politzer,
NuTeV xF3 agrees with theory for medium x.
At low x different Q2 dependence.
At high x (x>0.6) NuTeV is systematically
higher.
nuclear effects parameterization from charge
lepton data, assumed to be the same for neutrino
40
scattering ---- WRONG!

Summary

Very exciting times in Neutrino Physics

Neutrinos not only have surprised us with a small but significant


mass but they are demonstrating mixing in a very different manner
than quarks why?
Still many open questions in the neutrino sector? Very crucial but
experimentally very difficult questions to answer:

The NOA Experiment has the potential to measure the missing strength
sin213 and determine the order of neutrino mass states (sign of m13 ). Will
start taking data in 2011.

Neutrinos, with their ability to taste particular quarks can add


significantly to our QCD studies if we can only determine how
nuclear effects mask their quark level interactions.

41

Milestones in the History of Neutrino Physics

1930 - Pauli postulates the existence of the neutrino


1934 - Enrico Fermi develops a comprehensive theory of radioactive decays, including Pauli's
hypothetical particle, which Fermi coins the neutrino (Italian: "little neutral one").
1959 - Discovery of a particle fitting the expected characteristics of the neutrino is announced by
Clyde Cowan and Fred Reines.
1962 - Experiment at Brookhaven National Laboratory discovered a second type of neutrino ().
1968 - The first experiment to detect e produced by the Sun's burning (using a liquid Chlorine target
deep underground) reports that less than half the expected neutrinos are observed.
1985 - The IMB experiment observes fewer atmospheric interactions than expected.
1989 - Kamiokande becomes the second experiment to detect e from the Sun finding only about 1/3
the expected rate.
1994 - Kamiokande finds that traveling the greatest distances from the point of production to the
detector exhibit the greatest depletion.
1997 - Super-Kamiokande reports a deficit of cosmic-ray and solar e, at rates agreeing with earlier
experiments.
1998 - The Super-Kamiokande collaboration announces evidence of non-zero neutrino mass at the
Neutrino '98 conference.
2000 - First direct evidence for the announced at Fermilab by DONUT collaboration.
2004 - K2K Experiment confirms (with limited statistics) Super -Kamiokande discovery .
2005 - MINOS starts data-taking to STUDY Neutrino Oscillation Phenomena
42

Probability for e Apperance


P(e in vacumn) = P1 + P2 + P3 + P4
P = sin2(23) sin2(213) sin2(1.27 m132 L/E)

Atmospheric

P = cos2(23) sin2(212) sin2(1.27 m122 L/E) Solar

P = J sin() sin(1.27 m132 L/E)

P = J cos() cos(1.27 m132 L/E)

Atmosphericsolar interference

where J = cos(13) sin (212) sin (213) sin (223) sin (1.27 m132 L/E) sin (1.27 m122 L/E)

In matter at oscillation maximum, P1 will be approximately multiplied by


(1 2E/ER) and P3 and P4 will be approximately multiplied by (1 E/ER)
(ER 11 GeV for the earths Crust), where the top sign is for neutrinos with
normal mass hierarchy and antineutrinos with inverted mass hierarchy.
This is about 30% effect for NuMI, about 11% effect for T2K
43

You might also like