188 research outputs found

    Earth matter effects on the supernova neutrino spectra

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    We explore the earth matter effects on the energy spectra of neutrinos from a supernova. We show that the observations of the energy spectra of νe\nu_e and νˉe\bar{\nu}_e from a galactic supernova may enable us to identify the solar neutrino solution, to determine the sign of Δm322\Delta m^2_{32}, and to probe the mixing matrix element Ue32|U_{e3}|^2 to values as low as 10310^{-3}. We point out scenarios in which the matter effects can even be established through the observation of the spectrum at a single detector.Comment: 8 pages LaTeX, 2 eps figures, uses Rinton-P9x6.cls. Talk given at CICHEP '2001, Cairo, Egypt, January 200

    Addressing RKR_K and neutrino mixing in a class of U(1)XU(1)_X models

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    We present a class of minimal U(1)XU(1)_X models as a plausible solution to the RKR_K anomaly that can also help reproduce the neutrino mixing pattern. The symmetries and the corresponding XX-charges of the fields are determined in a bottom-up approach demanding both theoretical and experimental consistencies. The breaking of U(1)XU(1)_X symmetry results in a massive ZZ^{\prime}, whose couplings with leptons and quarks are necessarily non-universal to address the RKR_K anomaly. In the process, an additional Higgs doublet is introduced to generate quark mixings. The mixings in the neutrino sector are generated through Type-I seesaw mechanism by the addition of three right handed neutrinos and a scalar singlet. The ZZ^{\prime} can be probed with a few hundred fb1^{-1} of integrated luminosity at the 13 TeV LHC in the di-muon channel.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, talk presented at the 9th International Workshop on the CKM Unitarity Triangl

    No-go for exactly degenerate neutrinos at high scale?

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    We show in a model independent manner that, if the magnitudes of Majorana masses of neutrinos are exactly equal at some high scale, the radiative corrections cannot reproduce the observed masses and mixing spectrum at the low scale, irrespective of the Majorana phases or the mixing angles at the high scale.Comment: 12 pages ReVTeX, A few typos corrected in the 2nd versio

    2540 km: Bimagic baseline for neutrino oscillation parameters

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    We show that a source-to-detector distance of 2540 km offers multiple advantages for a low energy neutrino factory with a detector that can identify muon charge. At this baseline, for any neutrino hierarchy, the wrong-sign muon signal is almost independent of CP violation and θ13\theta_{13} in certain energy ranges. This reduces the uncertainties due to these parameters and allows the identification of the hierarchy in a clean way. In addition, part of the muon spectrum is also sensitive to the CP violating phase and θ13\theta_{13}, so that the same setup can be used to probe these parameters as well.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, Revtex4. Text modified. Version to appear in PR

    Signatures of heavy sterile neutrinos at long baseline experiments

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    Sterile neutrinos with masses 0.1\sim 0.1 eV or higher would play an important role in astrophysics and cosmology. We explore possible signatures of such sterile neutrinos at long baseline experiments. We determine the neutrino conversion probabilities analytically in a 4-neutrino framework, including matter effects, treating the sterile mixing angles θ14,θ24,θ34\theta_{14}, \theta_{24}, \theta_{34}, the deviation of θ23\theta_{23} from maximality,as well as θ13\theta_{13} and the ratio Δm2/Δmatm2\Delta m^2_\odot/\Delta m^2_{atm} as small parameters for a perturbative expansion. This gives rise to analytically tractable expressions for flavor conversion probabilities from which effects of these parameters can be clearly understood. We numerically calculate the signals at a neutrino factory with near and far detectors that can identify the lepton charge, and point out observables that can discern the sterile mixing signals. We find that clean identification of sterile mixing would be possible for \theta_{24}\theta_{34} \gsim 0.005 and \theta_{14} \gsim 0.06 rad with the current bound of θ13<0.2\theta_{13} < 0.2 rad; a better θ13\theta_{13} bound would allow probing smaller values of sterile mixing. We also generalize the formalism for any number of sterile neutrinos, and demonstrate that only certain combinations of sterile mixing parameters are relevant irrespective of the number of sterile neutrinos. This also leads to a stringent test of the scenario with multiple sterile neutrinos that currently is able to describe all the data from the short baseline experiments, including LSND and MiniBOONE.Comment: 28 pages, 12 figures, Revtex4 forma

    Nonuniversality of indirect CP asymmetries in Dππ,KKD \to \pi\pi, KK decays

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    We point out that, if the direct CP asymmetries in the Dπ+πD \to \pi^+ \pi^- and DK+KD \to K^+ K^- decays are unequal, the indirect CP asymmetries as measured in these modes are necessarily unequal. This nonuniversality of indirect CP asymmetries can be significant with the right amount of new physics contributions, a scenario that may be fine-tuned, but is still viable. A model-independent fit to the current data allows different indirect CP asymmetries in the above two decays. This could even be contributing to the apparent tension between the difference CP asymmetries ΔACP\Delta A_{\rm CP} measured through the pion-tagged and muon-tagged data samples at the LHCb. This also implies that the measurements of AΓA_\Gamma and yCPy_{\rm CP} in the π+π\pi^+ \pi^- and K+KK^+ K^- decay modes can be different, and averaging over these two modes should be avoided. In any case, the complete analysis of CP violation measurements in the DD meson sector needs to take into account the possibility of different indirect CP asymmetries in the π+π\pi^+\pi^- and K+KK^+ K^- channels.Comment: 23 pages, 14 Postscript figures, matches published versio

    Radiatively broken symmetries of nonhierarchical neutrinos

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    Symmetry-based ideas, such as the quark-lepton complementarity (QLC) principle and the tri-bimaximal mixing (TBM) scheme, have been proposed to explain the observed mixing pattern of neutrinos. We argue that such symmetry relations need to be imposed at a high scale Λ1012\Lambda \sim 10^{12} GeV characterizing the large masses of right-handed neutrinos required to implement the seesaw mechanism. For nonhierarchical neutrinos, renormalisation group evolution down to a laboratory energy scale λ103\lambda \sim 10^3 GeV tends to radiatively break these symmetries at a significant level and spoil the mixing pattern predicted by them. However, for Majorana neutrinos, suitable constraints on the extra phases α2,3\alpha_{2,3} enable the retention of those high scale mixing patterns at laboratory energies. We examine this issue within the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model (MSSM) and demonstrate the fact posited above for two versions of QLC and two versions of TBM. The appropriate constraints are worked out for all these four cases. Specifically, a preference for α2π\alpha_2 \approx \pi (i.e. m1m2m_1 \approx -m_2) emerges in each case. We also show how a future accurate measurement of θ13\theta_{13} may enable some discrimination among these four cases in spite of renormalization group evolution.Comment: 29 pages, 4 figures, revtex4. Minor changes in the Introduction, references added. Final version to be published in Phys. Rev.
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