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Featured researches published by W. Q. Gu.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2014

Automated calibration system for a high-precision measurement of neutrino mixing angle θ13 with the Daya Bay antineutrino detectors

J. L. Liu; B. Cai; R. Carr; D.A. Dwyer; W. Q. Gu; Gang Li; X. Qian; R. D. McKeown; R. H. M. Tsang; W. Wang; F. F. Wu; C. Zhang

We describe the automated calibration system for the antineutrino detectors in the Daya Bay Neutrino Experiment. This system consists of 24 identical units instrumented on 8 identical 20-ton liquid scintillator detectors. Each unit is a fully automated robotic system capable of deploying an LED and various radioactive sources into the detector along given vertical axes. Selected results from performance studies of the calibration system are reported.


Journal of Instrumentation | 2013

Assembly and Installation of the Daya Bay Antineutrino Detectors

H. R. Band; R.L. Brown; R. Carr; X. C. Chen; X. Chen; J. J. Cherwinka; M. C. Chu; E. Draeger; D. A. Dwyer; W. R. Edwards; R. Gill; J. Goett; L. Greenler; W. Q. Gu; W. S. He; K. M. Heeger; Y. K. Heng; P. Hinrichs; T. H. Ho; M. Hoff; Y. Hsiung; Y. Jin; L. Kang; S. H. Kettell; M. Kramer; K. K. Kwan; M. W. Kwok; C. A. Lewis; G. S. Li; N.Y. Li

The Daya Bay reactor antineutrino experiment is designed to make a precision measurement of the neutrino mixing angle θ_(13), and recently made the definitive discovery of its non-zero value. It utilizes a set of eight, functionally identical antineutrino detectors to measure the reactor flux and spectrum at baselines of ~ 300–2000 m from the Daya Bay and Ling Ao Nuclear Power Plants. The Daya Bay antineutrino detectors were built in an above-ground facility and deployed side-by-side at three underground experimental sites near and far from the nuclear reactors. This configuration allows the experiment to make a precision measurement of reactor antineutrino disappearance over km-long baselines and reduces relative systematic uncertainties between detectors and nuclear reactors. This paper describes the assembly and installation of the Daya Bay antineutrino detectors.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2015

Neutron calibration sources in the Daya Bay experiment

J. Liu; R. Carr; D.A. Dwyer; W. Q. Gu; Gang Li; R. D. McKeown; X. Qian; R. H. M. Tsang; F. F. Wu; C. Zhang

We describe the design and construction of the low rate neutron calibration sources used in the Daya Bay Reactor Anti-neutrino Experiment. Such sources are free of correlated gamma-neutron emission, which is essential in minimizing induced background in the anti-neutrino detector. The design characteristics have been validated in the Daya Bay anti-neutrino detector.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2016

Background evaluation for the neutron sources in the Daya Bay experiment

W. Q. Gu; G. F. Cao; X. Chen; X.P. Ji; Gang Li; J. J. Ling; J. L. Liu; X. Qian; W. Wang

Abstract We present an evaluation of the background induced by 241 Am– 13 C neutron calibration sources in the Daya Bay reactor neutrino experiment. As a significant background for electron-antineutrino detection at 0.26 ± 0.12 per detector per day on average, it has been estimated by a Monte Carlo simulation that was benchmarked by a special calibration data set. This dedicated data set also provides the energy spectrum of the background.


arXiv: High Energy Physics - Experiment | 2018

Measurement of electron antineutrino oscillation with 1958 days of operation at Daya Bay

D. Adey; F.P. An; A. B. Balantekin; H. R. Band; M. Bishai; S. Blyth; D. Cao; G. F. Cao; Jun Cao; Y. L. Chan; J. F. Chang; Y. Chang; H. S. Chen; Shaomin Chen; Y. B. Chen; Y. X. Chen; J. H. Cheng; Z.K. Cheng; J. J. Cherwinka; M. C. Chu; A. Chukanov; J.P. Cummings; F.S. Deng; Y. Y. Ding; M. V. Diwan; M. Dolgareva; D.A. Dwyer; W. R. Edwards; M. Gonchar; G. H. Gong

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Gang Li

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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D.A. Dwyer

California Institute of Technology

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R. Carr

California Institute of Technology

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X. Qian

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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G. F. Cao

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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J. L. Liu

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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X. Chen

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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M. C. Chu

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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C. Zhang

California Institute of Technology

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F. F. Wu

California Institute of Technology

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