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Electron-beam energy reconstruction for neutrino oscillation measurements

  • The CLAS Collaboration
  • , e4ν Collaboration*
  • Old Dominion University
  • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Tel Aviv University
  • Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory
  • University of Pittsburgh
  • Michigan State University
  • University of Valencia
  • Universidad Autónoma de Madrid
  • Florida International University
  • George Washington University
  • Temple University
  • National Institute for Nuclear Physics
  • Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility
  • Russian Research Centre Kurchatov Institute
  • Duquesne University
  • University of Brescia
  • Fairfield University
  • Carnegie Mellon University
  • Université Paris-Saclay
  • Universidad Técnica Federico Santa Maria
  • Lomonosov Moscow State University
  • Mississippi State University
  • University of Ferrara
  • University of Glasgow
  • University of Connecticut
  • Lamar University
  • Idaho State University
  • Florida State University
  • University of Rome Tor Vergata
  • A. Alikhanian Yerevan Institute of Physics

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

51 Scopus citations

Abstract

Neutrinos exist in one of three types or ‘flavours’—electron, muon and tau neutrinos—and oscillate from one flavour to another when propagating through space. This phenomena is one of the few that cannot be described using the standard model of particle physics (reviewed in ref. 1), and so its experimental study can provide new insight into the nature of our Universe (reviewed in ref. 2). Neutrinos oscillate as a function of their propagation distance (L) divided by their energy (E). Therefore, experiments extract oscillation parameters by measuring their energy distribution at different locations. As accelerator-based oscillation experiments cannot directly measure E, the interpretation of these experiments relies heavily on phenomenological models of neutrino–nucleus interactions to infer E. Here we exploit the similarity of electron–nucleus and neutrino–nucleus interactions, and use electron scattering data with known beam energies to test energy reconstruction methods and interaction models. We find that even in simple interactions where no pions are detected, only a small fraction of events reconstruct to the correct incident energy. More importantly, widely used interaction models reproduce the reconstructed energy distribution only qualitatively and the quality of the reproduction varies strongly with beam energy. This shows both the need and the pathway to improve current models to meet the requirements of next-generation, high-precision experiments such as Hyper-Kamiokande (Japan)3 and DUNE (USA)4.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)565-570
Number of pages6
JournalNature
Volume599
Issue number7886
DOIs
StatePublished - 25 Nov 2021

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