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Featured researches published by A. M. Gago.


Journal of High Energy Physics | 2010

Resolving CP Violation by Standard and Nonstandard Interactions and Parameter Degeneracy in Neutrino Oscillations

A. M. Gago; Hisakazu Minakata; Hiroshi Nunokawa; Shoichi Uchinami; R. Zukanovich Funchal

In neutrino oscillation with non-standard interactions (NSI) the system is enriched with CP violation caused by phases due to NSI in addition to the standard lepton Kobayashi-Maskawa phase δ. In this paper we show that it is possible to disentangle the two CP violating effects by measurement of muon neutrino appearance by a near-far two detector setting in neutrino factory experiments. Prior to the quantitative analysis we investigate in detail the various features of the neutrino oscillations with NSI, but under the assumption that only one of the NSI elements, εeμ or εeτ, is present. They include synergy between the near and the far detectors, the characteristic differences between the εeμ and εeτ systems, and in particular, the parameter degeneracy. Finally, we use a concrete setting with the muon energy of 50GeV and magnetized iron detectors at two baselines, one at L = 3000 km and the other at L = 7000 km, each having a fiducial mass of 50 kton to study the discovery potential of NSI and its CP violation effects. We demonstrate, by assuming 4 × 1021 useful muon decays for both polarities, that one can identify nonstandard CP violation down to |εeμ| ≃ a few × 10−3, and |εeτ| ≃ 10−2 at 3σ CL for θ13 down to sin2 2θ13 = 10−4 in most of the region of δ. The impact of the existence of NSI on the measurement of δ and the mass hierarchy is also worked out.


Physical Review Letters | 2014

Measurement of Ratios of νμ Charged-Current Cross Sections on C, Fe, and Pb to CH at Neutrino Energies 2–20 GeV

B. G. Tice; M. Datta; J. Mousseau; L. Aliaga; O. Altinok; M. G. Barrios Sazo; M. Betancourt; A. Bodek; A. Bravar; W. K. Brooks; H. S. Budd; M. J. Bustamante; A. Butkevich; D. A. Martinez Caicedo; C. M. Castromonte; M. E. Christy; J. Chvojka; H. da Motta; J. Devan; S. A. Dytman; G. A. Díaz; B. Eberly; J. Felix; L. Fields; G. A. Fiorentini; A. M. Gago; H. R. Gallagher; R. Gran; Deborah A. Harris; A. Higuera

We present measurements of ν(μ) charged-current cross section ratios on carbon, iron, and lead relative to a scintillator (CH) using the fine-grained MINERvA detector exposed to the NuMI neutrino beam at Fermilab. The measurements utilize events of energies 2<E(ν)<20 GeV, with ⟨E(ν)⟩ = 8 GeV, which have a reconstructed μ(-) scattering angle less than 17° to extract ratios of inclusive total cross sections as a function of neutrino energy E(ν) and flux-integrated differential cross sections with respect to the Bjorken scaling variable x. These results provide the first high-statistics direct measurements of nuclear effects in neutrino scattering using different targets in the same neutrino beam. Measured cross section ratios exhibit a relative depletion at low x and enhancement at large x. Both become more pronounced as the nucleon number of the target nucleus increases. The data are not reproduced by GENIE, a conventional neutrino-nucleus scattering simulation, or by the alternative models for the nuclear dependence of inelastic scattering that are considered.


Physical Review D | 2015

Measurement of muon plus proton final states in νμ interactions on hydrocarbon at = 4.2 GeV

T. Walton; M. Betancourt; L. Aliaga; O. Altinok; A. Bodek; A. Bravar; H. S. Budd; M. J. Bustamante; A. Butkevich; D. A. Martinez Caicedo; M. F. Carneiro; C. M. Castromonte; M. E. Christy; J. Chvojka; H. da Motta; M. Datta; J. Devan; S. A. Dytman; G. A. Díaz; B. Eberly; J. Felix; L. Fields; R. Fine; G. A. Fiorentini; A. M. Gago; H. R. Gallagher; R. Gran; Deborah A. Harris; A. Higuera; K. Hurtado

A study of charged-current muon neutrino scattering on hydrocarbon in which the final state includes a muon, at least one proton, and no pions is presented. Although this signature has the topology of neutrino quasielastic scattering from neutrons, the event sample contains contributions from quasielastic and inelastic processes where pions are absorbed in the nucleus. The analysis accepts events with muon production angles up to 70° and proton kinetic energies greater than 110 MeV. The cross section, when based completely on hadronic kinematics, is well described by a relativistic Fermi gas nuclear model including the neutrino event generator modeling for inelastic processes and particle transportation through the nucleus. This is in contrast to the quasielastic cross section based on muon kinematics, which is best described by an extended model that incorporates multinucleon correlations. As a result, this measurement guides the formulation of a complete description of neutrino-nucleus interactions that encompasses the hadronic as well as the leptonic aspects of this process.


Physical Review D | 2016

Neutrino flux predictions for the NuMI beam

L. Aliaga; M. Kordosky; T. Golan; O. Altinok; L. Bellantoni; A. Bercellie; M. Betancourt; A. Bravar; H. S. Budd; M. F. Carneiro; S. A. Dytman; G. A. Díaz; E. Endress; J. Felix; L. Fields; R. Fine; A. M. Gago; R. Galindo; H. R. Gallagher; R. Gran; Deborah A. Harris; A. Higuera; K. Hurtado; M. Kiveni; J. Kleykamp; T. Le; E. Maher; S. Manly; W. A. Mann; C. M. Marshall

Knowledge of the neutrino flux produced by the Neutrinos at the Main Injector (NuMI) beamline is essential to the neutrino oscillation and neutrino interaction measurements of the MINERvA, MINOS+, NOvA and MicroBooNE experiments at Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory. We have produced a flux prediction which uses all available and relevant hadron production data, incorporating measurements of particle production off of thin targets as well as measurements of particle yields from a spare NuMI target exposed to a 120 GeV proton beam. The result is the most precise flux prediction achieved for a neutrino beam in the one to tens of GeV energy region. We have also compared the prediction to in situ measurements of the neutrino flux and find good agreement.


Physical Review D | 2016

Measurement of Neutrino Flux from Neutrino-Electron Elastic Scattering

J. Park; L. Aliaga; O. Altinok; L. Bellantoni; A. Bercellie; M. Betancourt; A. Bodek; A. Bravar; H. S. Budd; T. Cai; M. F. Carneiro; M. E. Christy; J. Chvojka; H. da Motta; S. A. Dytman; G. A. Díaz; B. Eberly; J. Felix; L. Fields; R. Fine; A. M. Gago; R. Galindo; A. Ghosh; T. Golan; R. Gran; Deborah A. Harris; A. Higuera; J. Kleykamp; M. Kordosky; T. Le

In muon-neutrino elastic scattering on electrons is an observable neutrino process whose cross section is precisely known. Consequently a measurement of this process in an accelerator-based νμ beam can improve the knowledge of the absolute neutrino flux impinging upon the detector; typically this knowledge is limited to ~10% due to uncertainties in hadron production and focusing. We also isolated a sample of 135±17 neutrino-electron elastic scattering candidates in the segmented scintillator detector of MINERvA, after subtracting backgrounds and correcting for efficiency. We show how this sample can be used to reduce the total uncertainty on the NuMI νμ flux from 9% to 6%. Finally, our measurement provides a flux constraint that is useful to other experiments using the NuMI beam, and this technique is applicable to future neutrino beams operating at multi-GeV energies.


Physical Review Letters | 2000

Solar neutrino problem and gravitationally induced long-wavelength neutrino oscillation

A. M. Gago; Hiroshi Nunokawa; R. Zukanovich Funchal

We have reexamined the possibility of explaining the solar neutrino data through long-wavelength neutrino oscillations induced by a tiny breakdown of the weak equivalence principle of general relativity. We have found that such gravitationally induced oscillations can provide a viable solution to the solar neutrino problem.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2012

The MINERνA data acquisition system and infrastructure

G. N. Perdue; L. Bagby; B. Baldin; C. Gingu; Jamieson Olsen; P. Rubinov; E.C. Schulte; R. Bradford; W. K. Brooks; D.A.M. Caicedo; C.M. Castromonte; J. Chvojka; H. da Motta; I. Danko; J. Devan; B. Eberly; J. Felix; L. Fields; G.A. Fiorentini; A. M. Gago; R. Gran; Deborah A. Harris; K. Hurtado; H. Lee; E. Maher; S. Manly; C. M. Marshall; K. S. McFarland; A. Mislivec; J. Mousseau

Abstract MINER ν A (Main INjector ExpeRiment ν - A ) is a new few-GeV neutrino cross-section experiment that began taking data in the FNAL NuMI (Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory Neutrinos at the Main Injector) beam-line in March of 2010. MINER ν A employs a fine-grained scintillator detector capable of complete kinematic characterization of neutrino interactions. This paper describes the MINER ν A data acquisition system (DAQ) including the readout electronics, software, and computing architecture.


Journal of High Energy Physics | 2010

Energy-independent new physics in the flavour ratios of high-energy astrophysical neutrinos

Mauricio Bustamante; A. M. Gago; Carlos Pena-Garay

We have studied the consequences of breaking the CPT symmetry in the neutrino sector, using the expected high-energy neutrino flux from distant cosmological sources such as active galaxies. For this purpose we have assumed three different hypotheses for the neutrino production model, characterised by the flavour fluxes at production ϕ0e: ϕ0μ: ϕ0τ = 1 : 2 : 0, 0 : 1 : 0, and 1 : 0 : 0, and studied the theoretical and experimental expectations for the muon-neutrino flux at Earth, ϕμ, and for the flavour ratios at Earth, R = ϕμ/ϕe and S = ϕτ /ϕμ. CPT violation (CPTV) has been implemented by adding an energy-independent term to the standard neutrino oscillation Hamiltonian. This introduces three new mixing angles, two new eigenvalues and three new phases, all of which have currently unknown values. We have varied the new mixing angles and eigenvalues within certain bounds, together with the parameters associated to pure standard oscillations. Our results indicate that, for the models 1 : 2 : 0 and 0 : 1 : 0, it might be possible to find large deviations of ϕμ, R, and S between the cases without and with CPTV, provided the CPTV eigenvalues lie within 10−29 − 10−27 GeV, or above. Moreover, if CPTV exists, there are certain values of R and S that can be accounted for by up to three production models. If no CPTV were observed, we could set limits on the CPTV eigenvalues of the same order. Detection prospects calculated using IceCube suggest that for the models 1 : 2 : 0 and 0 : 1 : 0, the modifications due to CPTV are larger and more clearly separable from the standard-oscillations predictions. We conclude that IceCube is potentially able to detect CPTV but that, depending on the values of the CPTV parameters, there could be a mis-determination of the neutrino production model.


Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics | 2010

IceCube expectations for two high-energy neutrino production models at active galactic nuclei

C. A. Argüelles; Mauricio Bustamante; A. M. Gago

We have determined the currently allowed regions of the parameter spaces of two representative models of diffuse neutrino flux from active galactic nuclei (AGN): one by Koers & Tinyakov (KT) and another by Becker & Biermann (BB). Our observable has been the number of upgoing muon-neutrinos expected in the 86-string IceCube detector, after 5 years of exposure, in the range 10^5 < E/GeV < 10^8. We have used the latest estimated discovery potential of the IceCube-86 array at the 5-sigma level to determine the lower boundary of the regions, while for the upper boundary we have used either the AMANDA upper bound on the neutrino flux or the more recent preliminary upper bound given by the half-completed IceCube-40 array (IC40). We have varied the spectral index of the proposed power-law fluxes, alpha, and two parameters of the BB model: the ratio between the boost factors of neutrinos and cosmic rays, Gamma_nu/Gamma_{CR}, and the maximum redshift of the sources that contribute to the cosmic-ray flux, zCRmax. For the KT model, we have considered two scenarios: one in which the number density of AGN does not evolve with redshift and another in which it evolves strongly, following the star formation rate. Using the IC40 upper bound, we have found that the models are visible in IceCube-86 only inside very thin strips of parameter space and that both of them are discarded at the preferred value of alpha = 2.7 obtained from fits to cosmic-ray data. Lower values of alpha, notably the values 2.0 and 2.3 proposed in the literature, fare better. In addition, we have analysed the capacity of IceCube-86 to discriminate between the models within the small regions of parameter space where both of them give testable predictions. Within these regions, discrimination at the 5-sigma level or more is guaranteed.


Journal of High Energy Physics | 2017

Visible neutrino decay in the light of appearance and disappearance long baseline experiments

A. M. Gago; Ricardo A. Gomes; Abner L. G. Gomes; Joel Jones-Perez; O. L. G. Peres

A bstractWe investigate the present constraints from MINOS and T2K experiments for the neutrino decay scenario induced by non-diagonal couplings of Majorons to neutrinos. As novelty, on top of the typical invisible decay prescription, we add the contribution of visible decay, where final products can be observed. This new effect depends on the nature of the neutrino-Majoron coupling, which can be of scalar or pseudoscalar type. Using the combination of disappearance data from MINOS and disappearance and appearance data from T2K, for normal ordering, we constrain the decay parameter α ≡ E Γ for the heaviest neutrino, where E and Γ are the neutrino energy and width, respectively. We find that when considering visible decay within appearance data, one can improve current neutrino long-baseline constraints up to α<O10−5eV2

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L. Fields

Northwestern University

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R. Gran

University of Minnesota

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J. Felix

Universidad de Guanajuato

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S. A. Dytman

University of Pittsburgh

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A. Bodek

University of Rochester

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G. A. Díaz

Pontifical Catholic University of Peru

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H. da Motta

State University of New York System

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