First Double-Differential Measurement of Kinematic Imbalance in Neutrino Interactions with the MicroBooNE Detector
Metadatos
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American Physical Society
Fecha
2023-09-06Referencia bibliográfica
P. Abratenko et al. (The MicroBooNE Collaboration). First Double-Differential Measurement of Kinematic Imbalance in Neutrino Interactions with the MicroBooNE Detector. Phys. Rev. Lett. 131, 101802. [https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.131.101802]
Patrocinador
European Union’s Horizon 2020 Marie Sklodowska-Curie Actions; Fermi Research Alliance, LLC DE-AC02-07CH11359; Fundamental Interactions; High Energy Physics and Nuclear Physics; United Kingdom Research and Innovation; National Science Foundation NSF; U.S. Department of Energy DE-AC02-06CH11357 USDOE; Office of Science SC; Argonne National Laboratory ANL; Laboratory Directed Research and Development LDRD; UK Research and Innovation UKRI; Allen Institute for Artificial Intelligence AI2; Science and Technology Facilities Council STFC; Royal Society; Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Förderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung SNFResumen
We report the first measurement of flux-integrated double-differential quasielasticlike neutrino-argon cross sections, which have been made using the Booster Neutrino Beam and the MicroBooNE detector at Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory. The data are presented as a function of kinematic imbalance variables which are sensitive to nuclear ground-state distributions and hadronic reinteraction processes. We find that the measured cross sections in different phase-space regions are sensitive to different nuclear effects. Therefore, they enable the impact of specific nuclear effects on the neutrino-nucleus interaction to be isolated more completely than was possible using previous single-differential cross section measurements. Our results provide precision data to help test and improve neutrino-nucleus interaction models. They further support ongoing neutrino-oscillation studies by establishing phase-space regions where precise reaction modeling has already been achieved.





