Moon Moon Devi
Tata Institute of Fundamental Research
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Featured researches published by Moon Moon Devi.
Pramana | 2017
Shakeel Ahmed; Deepak Samuel; V.K.S. Kashyap; Anushree Ghosh; B. Choudhary; C. Ranganathaiah; K. Meghna; R. Kanishka; Shiba Prasad Behera; Sanjib Kumar Agarwalla; Deepak Tiwari; Rashid Hasan; Ankit Gaur; J.B. Singh; Tarak Thakore; Poonam Mehta; Sandhya Choubey; Mohammad Salim; Waseem Bari; Sushant K. Raut; Supratik Mukhopadhyay; Sudeshna Banerjee; V. B. Chandratre; J.S. Shahi; Sudeb Bhattacharya; Sumanta Pal; Amitava Raychaudhuri; Abhik Jash; Daljeet Kaur; Ali Ajmi
The upcoming 50 kt magnetized iron calorimeter (ICAL) detector at the India-based Neutrino Observatory (INO) is designed to study the atmospheric neutrinos and antineutrinos separately over a wide range of energies and path lengths. The primary focus of this experiment is to explore the Earth matter effects by observing the energy and zenith angle dependence of the atmospheric neutrinos in the multi-GeV range. This study will be crucial to address some of the outstanding issues in neutrino oscillation physics, including the fundamental issue of neutrino mass hierarchy. In this document, we present the physics potential of the detector as obtained from realistic detector simulations. We describe the simulation framework, the neutrino interactions in the detector, and the expected response of the detector to particles traversing it. The ICAL detector can determine the energy and direction of the muons to a high precision, and in addition, its sensitivity to multi-GeV hadrons increases its physics reach substantially. Its charge identification capability, and hence its ability to distinguish neutrinos from antineutrinos, makes it an efficient detector for determining the neutrino mass hierarchy. In this report, we outline the analyses carried out for the determination of neutrino mass hierarchy and precision measurements of atmospheric neutrino mixing parameters at ICAL, and give the expected physics reach of the detector with 10 years of runtime. We also explore the potential of ICAL for probing new physics scenarios like CPT violation and the presence of magnetic monopoles.
Journal of Instrumentation | 2013
Moon Moon Devi; A Ghosh; Daljeet Kaur; S M Lakshmi; S Choubey; Amol Dighe; D. Indumathi; Sanjeev Kumar; M. V. N. Murthy; Naimuddin
The results of a Monte Carlo simulation study of the hadron energy response for the magnetized Iron CALorimeter detector, ICAL, proposed to be located at the India-based Neutrino Observatory (INO) is presented. Using a GEANT4 modeling of the detector ICAL, interactions of atmospheric neutrinos with target nuclei are simulated. The detector response to hadrons propagating through it is investigated using the hadron hit multiplicity in the active detector elements. The detector response to charged pions of fixed energy is studied first, followed by the average response to the hadrons produced in atmospheric neutrino interactions using events simulated with the NUANCE event generator. The shape of the hit distribution is observed to fit the Vavilov distribution, which reduces to a Gaussian at high energies. In terms of the parameters of this distribution, we present the hadron energy resolution as a function of hadron energy, and the calibration of hadron energy as a function of the hit multiplicity. The energy resolution for hadrons is found to be in the range 85% (for 1 GeV) – 36% (for 15 GeV).
Journal of High Energy Physics | 2014
Moon Moon Devi; Tarak Thakore; Sanjib Kumar Agarwalla; Amol Dighe; Sachivalaya Marg
A bstractThe proposed ICAL experiment at INO aims to identify the neutrino mass hierarchy from observations of atmospheric neutrinos, and help improve the precision on the atmospheric neutrino mixing parameters. While the design of ICAL is primarily optimized to measure muon momentum, it is also capable of measuring the hadron energy in each event. Although the hadron energy is measured with relatively lower resolution, it nevertheless contains crucial information on the event, which may be extracted when taken concomitant with the muon data. We demonstrate that by adding the hadron energy information to the muon energy and muon direction in each event, the sensitivity of ICAL to the neutrino parameters can be improved significantly. Using the realistic detector response for ICAL, we present its enhanced reach for determining the neutrino mass hierarchy, the atmospheric mass squared difference and the mixing angle θ23, including its octant. In particular, we show that the analysis that uses hadron energy information can distinguish the normal and inverted mass hierarchies with Δχ2 ≈9 with 10 years exposure at the 50 kt ICAL, which corresponds to about 40% improvement over the muon-only analysis.
Journal of Instrumentation | 2014
S M Lakshmi; Anushree Ghosh; Moon Moon Devi; Daljeet Kaur; Sandhya Choubey; Amol Dighe; D. Indumathi; M. V. N. Murthy; Naimuddin
We report on a detailed simulation study of the hadron energy resolution as a function of the thickness of the absorber plates for the proposed Iron Calorimeter (ICAL) detector at the India-based Neutrino Observatory (INO). We compare the hadron resolutions obtained with absorber thicknesses in the range 1.5–8 cm for neutrino interactions in the energy range 2–15 GeV, which is relevant to hadron production in atmospheric neutrino interactions. We find that at lower energies, the thickness dependence of energy resolution is steeper than at higher energies, however there is a thickness-independent contribution that dominates at the lower thicknesses discussed in this work. As a result, the gain in hadron energy resolution with decreasing plate thickness is marginal. We present the results in the form of fits to a function with energy-dependent exponent.
Physical Review D | 2014
Animesh Chatterjee; Moon Moon Devi; Monojit Ghosh; Reetanjali Moharana; Sushant K. Raut
The IceCube Collaboration has recently announced the discovery of ultrahigh energy neutrino events. These neutrinos can be used to probe their production source, as well as leptonic mixing parameters. In this work, we have used the first IceCube data to constrain the leptonic
European Physical Journal C | 2016
Moon Moon Devi; Naba Kumar Mondal; B. Satyanarayana; R. R. Shinde
CP
Archive | 2013
Moon Moon Devi; Anushree Ghosh; Daljeet Kaur; Lakshmi S. Mohan; Sandhya Choubey; Amol Dighe; D. Indumathi; Sanjeev Kumar; M. V. N. Murthy; Naimuddin
violating phase
Archive | 2014
Moon Moon Devi
{\ensuremath{\delta}}_{CP}
arXiv: Instrumentation and Detectors | 2014
Lakshmi S. Mohan; Anushree Ghosh; Moon Moon Devi; Daljeet Kaur; Sandhya Choubey; Amol Dighe; D. Indumathi
. For this, we have analyzed the data in the form of flux ratios. We find that the fit to
Archive | 2013
Animesh Chatterjee; Moon Moon Devi; Monojit Ghosh; Reetanjali Moharana; Sushant K. Raut
{\ensuremath{\delta}}_{CP}