×
 Physics at Virginia

"Understanding Neutrons in Neutrino Experiments"


Andrew Sutton , Florida State Universtiy
[Host: Craig Group]
ABSTRACT:

Neutrons pose a significant challenge in neutrino experiments where energy reconstruction is critical. The behavior of neutrons is particularly model-dependent because they can take away interaction energy that is largely unseen owing to their non-ionizing nature. As a result, we must devise systematic uncertainties to quantify our understanding of both neutron production from a neutrino interaction and neutron propagation through the detector medium. Here, I will discuss two experiments based at Fermilab that seek to constrain both of these uncertainties: 1) the long-baseline neutrino oscillation experiment NOvA and 2) the Accelerator Neutrino Neutron Interaction Experiment (ANNIE). In NOvA, we have implemented a supplementary neutron-on-carbon inelastic scattering model for medium energy neutrons that has shown an improved agreement between data and simulation. While ANNIE is a gadolinium-doped water Cherenkov detector with a rich R&D program and a primary physics goal of measuring neutron production from neutrino interactions.

High Energy Physics Seminar
Wednesday, April 10, 2024
4:00 PM
Dell 2, Room 100
Note special time.
Note special room.

https://virginia.zoom.us/j/92287909487?pwd=NjkwWlFFSnRYblJmUWVEZDZ5RU11QT09

Meeting ID:
922 8790 9487
Passcode: HEPseminar


 Add to your calendar

To add a speaker, send an email to phys-speakers@Virginia.EDU. Please include the seminar type (e.g. High Energy Physics Seminars), date, name of the speaker, title of talk, and an abstract (if available).