Title: MINERnA: Responses to PAC Questions
1MINERnAResponses to PAC Questions
- Kevin McFarlandUniversity of RochesterFNAL
PAC13 December 2003
2Question 1
- How much money do you expect from Nuclear
Physics sources? How much from Fermilab? Can
you provide a table of the labs obligations? - Role of Universities and Nuclear Physics
- FNAL Detector Costs (in proposal)
- FNAL Installation, Outfitting Costs
3Reminder from YesterdayHow We Plan to Fund
MINERnA
- Seek to fund bulk of detector from University
program funds and infrastructure programs - This cannot happen without strong endorsement
from this PAC and the lab
HEP/NP Partnership
4Nuclear Physics and MINERnA
- Four university groups and Jefferson Lab
- Rutgers and Hampton are two of the strongest
medium energy nuclear physics university groups - leaders at JLab in physics addressed by MINERnA
- Four FTE faculty, three FTE post-docs
- JLab manpower 1-2 FTE, use of facilities. No
- NSF MRI Hampton, Rutgers, Rochester
- 2/3 of MRI funding through NP groups!
- Rutgers (University) has pledged 150K
matching.Rochester matching contingent on NP
involvement. (Hampton is exempt from matching
requirement.)
5Costs to FNAL Detector
- Simply put outside agencies claim they will not
fun certain aspects of FNAL experiments,
including utilities, installation - Two detector project categories FNAL-specific
EDIA, critical safety systems - design of TRiP-based FE board 130K
- low voltage distribution (5kW total) 170K
- magnet coil MS 10K
- detector stand (not in proposal) no estimate
6Costs to FNAL Installation and Outfitting
- We are in the process of doing a real evaluation
of this. That process has not concluded. - In response to your (perfectly reasonable)
question, we tried to force that process to a
quick answer. - This is extremely rough, but has some
information.
7Question 2
- Quantitatively, in what way will MINERnA results
essentially effect the design of, or the eventual
analysis of data from, MINOS and an Off-Axis
experiment, and the interpretation of current
neutrino oscillation results? - Historical Tale K2K and the Axial Mass
- MINOS and Final State Uncertainties
- (more on this subject in response to question 3)
8K2K and MA
- This is not a direct answer to your question, but
its a relevanthistorical lesson - K2K found unexpectedresults in Q2
distributionof quasi-elastic events - blue box is correlatedenergy scale error
- Initially, was incorrectlyfixed by increasing MA
- dipole parameterization ofform-factor
- Bodek-Budd-Arrington showed it was a mistake in
sQE
9K2K and MA (contd)
- Difference between the fudged cross-section (to
match the observed Q2 distribution) and the true
cross-section - End resultK2K assignedsystematic of20 in
theabsolute rateat far detector
10K2K and MA (contd)
- Chris Walter at NUINT02 effect of difference
between correct and fudged solution if one is in
data and one is in MC.
this is a toy analysis of nm disappearance at
J-PARC Phase I
11Why Neutrino CC Energy doesnt equal visible
energy in MINOS a) p only leave KE b) some p
get absorbedc) p0s deposit all energy in
calorimeterEvent multiplicity counts,
especially at low energy!Does not cancel in
near/farMINOS cant measure multiplicitiesTest
change a)b) energy loss by 20 of itself,
which is optimistic for the error with no
MINERVA
One Final State Effect Neutrino Test Beam
D.Michael, yesterday
12Question 3
- In what ways would a fine-grained detector
improve an off-axis experiment?
13- Backgrounds to Off Axis
- nes in the beam
- NC events
- nm CC events
- nm CC present in ND, not in FD because of
oscillations - NC events from low energy nm s (upstream)
- ne from m decays (downstream)
- As a result, Near/Far Ratio is different for each
of these three backgrounds!
- Ideally, want to know
- how many events look like background in Off-Axis
Near Detector, and - What is the composition of those events
- Minerna can measure all three samples on axis and
extrapolate to predict what off axis ND should
see, or for better precision, Minerva can go off
axis!
14Another way to look at this How does Figure of
Merit change as you increase statistics?
15Question 4
- For proposal how well can measurements be
carried out?
- We dont have full treatments of backgrounds in
most cases of analyses. - We do have excellent knowledge of resolutions and
reconstruction efficiency (hit level MC and
reconstruction package). - CC/NC Coherent Analyses (most complete)
- Quasi-Elastic Sample
- Strange Exclusive Final States
16Measurement of CoherentPion Production
MINERnA 4-yr Run Plan 25 K CC / 12.5 K NC events
off C 8.3 K CC/ 4.2 K NC off Fe and Pb
Errors here do include backgrounds, efficiencies
for realistic cuts
17Coherent CC Pion Production Event Selection
Using the Minerva MC and the energy and tracking
resolutions obtained in the detector studies, we
have evaluated the efficiency for identifying CC
coherent events. Topological cuts 2 visible
tracks (gt8 hits on each) -- muon
(non-interacting) -- and pion (interacting)
candidates less than 500 MeV energy from
neutrals Pion interaction point gt 30 cm from
vertex Kinematic Cuts x lt 0.2 t (q pp)2 lt
0.2 GeV2 e 35 for these cuts.
18Coherent NC Pion Production
- Neutral pion identification has40 efficiency
- Background is real p0 from resonance production
- This is expected signal/background separation
19Measurement of FA(Q2)
- Errors are purely statistical and do not take
into account two effects, which are reduced
when including quasi-elastic kinemeatic
constraints - p/p ambiguity for interacting track
- Subtraction of D production with absorbed p
from subsequent decay - In addition is a 5 error due to beam
uncertainties
Extraction of FA, assuming exact Dipole and
4-year data run
Ability to distinguish between alternative Q2
shapes from vector form factor studies
FA /FA (dipole)
20Strange Particle Production
Existing Strange Particle Production Gargamelle-PS
- 15 L events. FNAL - 100 events ZGS - 7
events BNL - 8 events Larger NOMAD
inclusive sample expected
- MINERvA will focus on fully reconstructed
exclusive states - require the V0 two track decay (L ? p p- and
K0S ? p p-) - Prompt K decay yields a twin-peak signature in
time profile of the event - Efficiency is high, 85 or better, because final
state p is soft - Non-strange backgrounds not studied
comprehensively - strategy is to reconstruct intermediate V0 mass,
require monochromatic m - very low backgrounds expected
MINERnA Exclusive States 100x earlier samples 3
tons and 4 years DS 0 m- K L0 10.5 K m- p0
K L0 9.5 K m- p K0 L0 6.5 K m- K- K
p 5.0 K m- K0 K p0 p 1.5 K DS 1 m-
K p 16.0 K m- K0 p 2.5 K m- p K0n 2.0
K DS 0 - Neutral Current n K L0 3.5 K n K0
L0 1.0 K n K0 L0 3.0 K
21Other Questions
- What would the effect on event rates if you only
had low energy running? On physics?