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Long-Baseline Neutrino Oscillation Experiments

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2013

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Hindawi Publishing Corporation
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Feldman, G. J., J. Hartnell, and T. Kobayashi. 2013. “Long-Baseline Neutrino Oscillation Experiments.” Advances in High Energy Physics 2013: 1–30. doi:10.1155/2013/475749.

Abstract

A review of accelerator long-baseline neutrino oscillation experiments is provided, including all experiments performed to date and the projected sensitivity of those currently in progress. Accelerator experiments have played a crucial role in the confirmation of the neutrino oscillation phenomenon and in precision measurements of the parameters. With a fixed baseline and detectors providing good energy resolution, precise measurements of the ratio of distance/energy (L/E) on the scale of individual events have been made and the expected oscillatory pattern resolved. Evidence for electron neutrino appearance has recently been obtained, opening a door for determining the CP violating phase as well as resolving the mass hierarchy and the octant of theta23: some of the last unknown parameters of the standard model extended to include neutrino mass.

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eutrino: oscillation, neutrino: mass, mass: hierarchy, CP: violation, accelerator, energy resolution, sensitivity, neutrino/mu: secondary beam, neutrino: path length, neutrino: energy, neutrino/mu: flux, neutrino/e: particle identification, neutrino/tau: particle identification, new physics: search for, neutrino: sterile, neutrino: mass difference, neutrino: mixing angle, violation: Lorentz, review, experimental results, KAMIOKANDE, MINOS, NOvA, OPERA, ICARUS, CNGS, KEK PS, Fermilab, Tokai J-PARC PS

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