T2K · 2019

Search for neutral-current induced single photon production at the ND280 near detector in T2K

J.Phys.G 46 08LT01 · 10.1088/1361-6471/ab227d

Measurements

CurrentFlavorTargetTopologyTypeObservablesEnergy
NCνμCHNC1γlimitupper limit on cross sectionmean energy ~0.6GeV

Abstract

Neutrino neutral-current induced single photon production is a sub-leading order process for accelerator-based neutrino beam experiments including T2K. It is, however, an important process to understand because it is a background for electron (anti)neutrino appearance oscillation experiments. Here, we performed the first search of this process below 1 GeV using the fine-grained detector at the T2K ND280 off-axis near detector. By reconstructing single photon kinematics from electron-positron pairs, we achieved 95\% pure gamma ray sample from 5.738×1020\times 10^{20} protons-on-targets neutrino mode data. We do not find positive evidence of neutral current induced single photon production in this sample. We set the model-dependent upper limit on the cross-section for this process, at 0.114×1038\times 10^{-38} cm2^2 (90\% C.L.) per nucleon, using the J-PARC off-axis neutrino beam with an average energy of <Eν>0.6\left<E_\nu\right>\sim 0.6 GeV. This is the first limit on this process below 1 GeV which is important for current and future oscillation experiments looking for electron neutrino appearance oscillation signals.

Citation

@article{T2K:2019odo,
    author = "Abe, K. and others",
    collaboration = "T2K",
    title = "{Search for neutral-current induced single photon production at the ND280 near detector in T2K}",
    eprint = "1902.03848",
    archivePrefix = "arXiv",
    primaryClass = "hep-ex",
    doi = "10.1088/1361-6471/ab227d",
    journal = "J. Phys. G",
    volume = "46",
    number = "8",
    pages = "08LT01",
    year = "2019"
}