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Past Experience of reactor neutrino experiments

This article discusses the past experiments conducted on reactor neutrinos, including the sources of neutrinos, methods of detection, and the challenges faced. The experiments at Daya Bay, CHOOZ, and Palo Verde are summarized, along with their limitations and findings.

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Past Experience of reactor neutrino experiments

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  1. Past Experience of reactor neutrino experiments Yifang Wang Institute of High Energy Physics, Beijing Nov. 28, 2003

  2. Contents • Reactor neutrino sources • Reactor neutrino detection • Past experiments • Summary

  3. Daya Bay

  4. Reactor: Source of neutrinos

  5. How Neutrinos are produced in reactors ?

  6. Systematic Error: Power

  7. Reactor thermal power Known to <1%

  8. Fission rate in the Reactor

  9. Prediction of reactor neutrino spectrum • Three ways to obtain reactor neutrino spectrum: • Direct measurement • First principle calculation • Sum up neutrino spectra from 235U, 239Pu, 241Pu and 238U 235U, 239Pu, 241Pu from their measured b spectra 238U(10%) from calculation (10%) • They all agree well within 3%

  10. Total error on neutrino spectrum

  11. Reactor neutrino detection

  12. Observed neutrino spectrum

  13. Background - Correlated Background - Uncorrelated: environmental radioactivity

  14. Precautions for a reactor n experiment • Cosmic-ray induced correlated background: • Enough overburden and shielding • Active shielding, small enough and well known ineff. • Environmental radiation(uncorrelated background): • Clean scintillator • PMT with Low radioactivity glass • Clean surrounding materials • Rn free environment • Enough shielding • Gd-loaded scintillator, good for bk. But aging • Calibration • Many sources at different positions • Birk’s law, (Cerenkov) light transport/re-emission, …

  15. CHOOZ 5t 0.1% Gd-loaded scintillators Shielding: 300 MWE 2 m scintillator + 0.14m Fe 1km baseline Signal: ~30/day Eff. : ~70% BK: corr. 1/day uncorr. 0.5/day

  16. Attenuation Length l vs time Acceleration of l aging

  17. Neutron energy spectrum Gd capture Edge effect Proton capture

  18. Energy cut Position cut

  19. Systematics

  20. Closer look -- Detection efficiency

  21. Experience gained • Not stable Gd-loaded scintillator (l~ 5-2m) • PMT directly in contact with scintillator  too high uncorr. Background  too high Eth(1.32 MeV) • Good shielding  low background • Homogeneous detector  Gd peak at 8 MeV • 2m scintillator shielding gives a neutron reduction of 0.8*106.

  22. Bad performance of reactor is a good news for neutrino physics

  23. R=1.01 2.8%

  24. Palo Verde 12t 0.1% Gd-loaded scintillators Shielding: 32 MWE /1m water 0.9 km baseline Signal: ~20/day Eff. ~ 10% BK: corr.: ~ 15/day uncorr. ~ 7/day

  25. Very stable Gd-loaded liquid scintillator

  26. Two trigger thresholds

  27. Power method: Neutrino signal follows the variation of reactor power Prompt (e+) and delayed (n) are asymmetric But background (g-g, n-n) are symmetric N1=Ngg+Nnn+Nnp+Nn N2=Ngg+Nnn+(1-e1)Nnp+(1-e2)Nn Two method used in Palo Verde Y.F. Wang et al., PRD 62(2000)013012

  28. Error on n selection cuts obtained from multi-variable analysis Systematics

  29. Experience gained • Good Gd-loaded scintillator(l ~ 11m) • Not enough shielding  too high corr./uncorr. Background • Segmentation makes Gd capture peak <6MeV  too high uncorr. Background • Rn may enter the detector, problem ? • Veto eff. is not high enough(97.5%) • Swap method to measure/cancel backgrounds  key to success • 1m water shielding gives a neutron reduction of 106 (lower energy, complicated event pattern).

  30. Summary • Reactor neutrino experiment is not trivial • Chooz and Palo Verde give a limit of sin22q13<0.1

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