M. Bishai
Brookhaven National Laboratory
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by M. Bishai.
arXiv: High Energy Physics - Phenomenology | 2007
V. Barger; D. Finley; C. Laughton; S. Pordes; A. Marchionni; R. Rameika; N. Saoulidou; R. Zwaska; M. Bishai; M. V. Diwan; M. Dierckxsens; H. Kirk; S. Kahn; N. Simos; W. Marciano; Z. Parsa; B. Viren; A L Et
This report provides the results of an extensive and important study of the potential for a U.S. scientific program that will extend our knowledge of neutrino oscillations well beyond what can be anticipated from ongoing and planned experiments worldwide. The program examined here has the potential to provide the U.S. particle physics community with world leading experimental capability in this intensely interesting and active field of fundamental research. Furthermore, this capability is not likely to be challenged anywhere else in the world for at least two decades into the future. The present study was initially commissioned in April 2006 by top research officers of Brookhaven National Laboratory and Fermilab and, as the study evolved, it also provides responses to questions formulated and addressed to the study group by the Neutrino Scientific Advisory Committee (NuSAG) of the U.S. DOE and NSF. The participants in the study, its Charge and history, plus the study results and conclusions are provided in this report and its appendices. A summary of the conclusions is provided in the Executive Summary.
Physical Review D | 2015
M. Bass; M. Bishai; D. Cherdack; M. V. Diwan; Z. Djurcic; J. Hernandez; B. Lundberg; V. Paolone; X. Qian; R. Rameika; L. Whitehead; R. J. Wilson; E. Worcester; G. P. Zeller
The goals of next-generation neutrino experiments include searching for CP violation in the lepton sector and precision studies of the neutrino mixing matrix. These measurements require an optimal combination of the experimental baseline (the distance between the neutrino source and detector) and the neutrino beam energy. In this paper, we study the baseline optimization for a longbaseline neutrino experiment, assuming a wide-band neutrino beam originating from the Fermilab proton complex.
Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2006
S. Kopp; M. Bishai; M. Dierckxsens; M. V. Diwan; A. R. Erwin; Deborah A. Harris; D. Indurthy; R. Keisler; M. Kostin; M. Lang; J. MacDonald; A. Marchionni; S. Mendoza; J. Morfin; D. Naples; D. Northacker; Ž Pavlović; L. Phelps; H. Ping; M. Proga; C. Vellissaris; B. Viren; R. Zwaska
The Neutrinos at the Main Injector (NuMI) facility is a conventional neutrino beam which produces muon neutrinos by focusing a beam of mesons into a long evacuated decay volume. We have built four arrays of ionization chambers to monitor the position and intensity of the hadron and muon beams associated with neutrino production at locations downstream of the decay volume. This article describes the chambers’ construction, calibration, and commissioning in the beam.
Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2006
R. Zwaska; M. Bishai; S. Childress; Gary Drake; C. O. Escobar; P. Gouffon; Deborah A. Harris; J. Hylen; D. Indurthy; G. M. Koizumi; S. Kopp; P. Lucas; A. Marchionni; A. Para; Ž Pavlović; W. Smart; R. Talaga; B. Viren
The Neutrinos at the Main Injector (NuMI) facility is a conventional horn-focused neutrino beam which produces muon neutrinos from a beam of mesons directed into a long evacuated decay volume. The relative alignment of the primary proton beam, target, and focusing horns affects the neutrino energy spectrum delivered to experiments. This paper describes a check of the alignment of these components using the proton beam.
arXiv: Instrumentation and Detectors | 2016
T. Alion; Dune; J. J. Black; A. Bashyal; M. Bass; M. Bishai; D. Cherdack; M. V. Diwan; Z. Djurcic; J. Evans; E. Fernandez-Martinez; L. Fields; Bonnie Fleming; R. Gran; R. Guenette; J. Hewes; M. Hogan; J. Hylen; T. Junk; S. Kohn; P. LeBrun; B. Lundberg; A. Marchionni; C. Morris; V. Papadimitriou; R. Rameika; R. Rucinski; S. Soldner-Rembold; M. Sorel; J. Urheim
The LBNF/DUNE CDR describes the proposed physics program and experimental design at the conceptual design phase. Volume 2, entitled The Physics Program for DUNE at LBNF, outlines the scientific objectives and describes the physics studies that the DUNE collaboration will perform to address these objectives. The long-baseline physics sensitivity calculations presented in the DUNE CDR rely upon simulation of the neutrino beam line, simulation of neutrino interactions in the far detector, and a parameterized analysis of detector performance and systematic uncertainty. The purpose of this posting is to provide the results of these simulations to the community to facilitate phenomenological studies of long-baseline oscillation at LBNF/DUNE. Additionally, this posting includes GDML of the DUNE single-phase far detector for use in simulations. DUNE welcomes those interested in performing this work as members of the collaboration, but also recognizes the benefit of making these configurations readily available to the wider community.
Unknown Journal | 2011
G. Tzanankos; A. Weber; K. Lang; C. Escobar; J. J. Evans; E. Falk; S. G. Wojcicki; P. Vahle; M. L. Marshak; J. K. Nelson; C. White; A. Blake; J. Schneps; M. Thomson; B Pahlka; R. Mehdiyev; D. Cronin-Hennessy; J. Hartnell; G. Pawloski; Z. Isvan; G. B. Mills; S. K. Swain; A. Kreymer; J.L.: aff Texas U. Ritchie; R. B. Patterson; A. Holin; R. Plunkett; R. Nichol; P. Lucas; Z. Pavlovic
This is a proposal to continue to expose the two MINOS detectors to the NuMI muon neutrino beam for three years starting in 2013. The medium energy setting of the NuMI beam projected for NO{nu}A will deliver about 18 x 10{sup 20} protons-on-target during the first three years of operation. This will allow the MINOS Far Detector to collect more than 10,000 charged current muon neutrino events in the 4-10 GeV energy range and provide a stringent test for non-standard neutrino interactions, sterile neutrinos, extra dimensions, neutrino time-of-flight, and perhaps more. In addition there will be more than 3,000 neutral current events which will be particularly useful in extending the sterile neutrino search range.
arXiv: High Energy Physics - Experiment | 2013
M. Bishai; M. V. Diwan; S. H. Kettell; J. Stewart; B. Viren; E. Worcester; R. Tschirhart; Lisa Whitehead
The rst phase of the long-baseline neutrino experiment, LBNE10, will use a broadband, high-energy neutrino beam with a 10-kt liquid argon TPC at 1300 km to study neutrino oscillation. In this paper, we describe potential upgrades to LBNE10 that use Project X to produce high-intensity, low-energy neutrino beams. Simultaneous, high-power operation of 8- and 60-GeV beams with a 200-kt water Cerenkov detector would provide sensitivity to ! e oscillations at the second oscillation maximum. We
Physical Review Letters | 2009
P. Adamson; A. A. Aguilar-Arevalo; C. E. Anderson; A. O. Bazarko; M. Bishai; S. J. Brice; B. C. Brown; L. Bugel; J. Cao; B. Choudhary; L. Coney; J. M. Conrad; D. C. Cox; A. Curioni; Z. Djurcic; D. A. Finley; B. T. Fleming; R. Ford; H. R. Gallagher; F. G. Garcia; G. T. Garvey; C. Green; J. A. Green; Deborah A. Harris; T. L. Hart; E. Hawker; J. Hylen; R. Imlay; R. A. Johnson; G. Karagiorgi
We report the first observation of off-axis neutrino interactions in the MiniBooNE detector from the NuMI beam line at Fermilab. The MiniBooNE detector is located 745 m from the NuMI production target, at 110 mrad angle (6.3 degrees) with respect to the NuMI beam axis. Samples of charged-current quasielastic numicro and nue interactions are analyzed and found to be in agreement with expectation. This provides a direct verification of the expected pion and kaon contributions to the neutrino flux and validates the modeling of the NuMI off-axis beam.
Physical Review Letters | 2009
P. Adamson; A. A. Aguilar-Arevalo; C. E. Anderson; A. O. Bazarko; M. Bishai; S. J. Brice; B. C. Brown; L. Bugel; J. Cao; B. Choudhary; L. Coney; J. M. Conrad; D. C. Cox; A. Curioni; Z. Djurcic; D. A. Finley; B. T. Fleming; R. Ford; H. R. Gallagher; F. G. Garcia; G. T. Garvey; C. Green; J. A. Green; D. A. Harris; T. L. Hart; E. Hawker; J. Hylen; R. Imlay; R. A. Johnson; G. Karagiorgi
We report the first observation of off-axis neutrino interactions in the MiniBooNE detector from the NuMI beam line at Fermilab. The MiniBooNE detector is located 745 m from the NuMI production target, at 110 mrad angle (6.3 degrees) with respect to the NuMI beam axis. Samples of charged-current quasielastic numicro and nue interactions are analyzed and found to be in agreement with expectation. This provides a direct verification of the expected pion and kaon contributions to the neutrino flux and validates the modeling of the NuMI off-axis beam.
Physical Review Letters | 2009
P. Adamson; A. A. Aguilar-Arevalo; C. E. Anderson; A. O. Bazarko; M. Bishai; S. J. Brice; B. C. Brown; L. Bugel; J. Cao; B. C. Choudhary; L. Coney; J. M. Conrad; D. C. Cox; A. Curioni; Z. Djurcic; D. A. Finley; B. T. Fleming; R. Ford; H. R. Gallagher; F. G. Garcia; G. T. Garvey; C. Green; J. A. Green; Deborah A. Harris; T. L. Hart; E. Hawker; J. Hylen; R. Imlay; R. A. Johnson; G. Karagiorgi
We report the first observation of off-axis neutrino interactions in the MiniBooNE detector from the NuMI beam line at Fermilab. The MiniBooNE detector is located 745 m from the NuMI production target, at 110 mrad angle (6.3 degrees) with respect to the NuMI beam axis. Samples of charged-current quasielastic numicro and nue interactions are analyzed and found to be in agreement with expectation. This provides a direct verification of the expected pion and kaon contributions to the neutrino flux and validates the modeling of the NuMI off-axis beam.