0000000000253401

AUTHOR

The Juno Collaboration

showing 3 related works from this author

Radioactivity control strategy for the JUNO detector

2021

JUNO is a massive liquid scintillator detector with a primary scientific goal of determining the neutrino mass ordering by studying the oscillated anti-neutrino flux coming from two nuclear power plants at 53 km distance. The expected signal anti-neutrino interaction rate is only 60 counts per day (cpd), therefore a careful control of the background sources due to radioactivity is critical. In particular, natural radioactivity present in all materials and in the environment represents a serious issue that could impair the sensitivity of the experiment if appropriate countermeasures were not foreseen. In this paper we discuss the background reduction strategies undertaken by the JUNO collabo…

ilmaisimettutkimuslaitteetneutriinottaustasäteilyhiukkasfysiikkaradioaktiivinen säteily
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JUNO sensitivity to low energy atmospheric neutrino spectra

2021

Atmospheric neutrinos are one of the most relevant natural neutrino sources that can be exploited to infer properties about cosmic rays and neutrino oscillations. The Jiangmen Underground Neutrino Observatory (JUNO) experiment, a 20 kton liquid scintillator detector with excellent energy resolution is currently under construction in China. JUNO will be able to detect several atmospheric neutrinos per day given the large volume. A study on the JUNO detection and reconstruction capabilities of atmospheric νe and νμ fluxes is presented in this paper. In this study, a sample of atmospheric neutrino Monte Carlo events has been generated, starting from theoretical models, and then processed by th…

Physics::Instrumentation and DetectorsilmaisimetAstrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical PhenomenaneutriinotneutrinosHigh Energy Physics::Experimenthiukkasfysiikka
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Radioactivity control strategy for the JUNO detector

2021

JUNO is a massive liquid scintillator detector with a primary scientific goal of determining the neutrino mass ordering by studying the oscillated anti-neutrino flux coming from two nuclear power plants at 53 km distance. The expected signal anti-neutrino interaction rate is only 60 counts per day, therefore a careful control of the background sources due to radioactivity is critical. In particular, natural radioactivity present in all materials and in the environment represents a serious issue that could impair the sensitivity of the experiment if appropriate countermeasures were not foreseen. In this paper we discuss the background reduction strategies undertaken by the JUNO collaboration…

Nuclear and High Energy PhysicsPhysics - Instrumentation and DetectorsPhysics::Instrumentation and DetectorsNuclear engineeringMonte Carlo methodControl (management)measurement methodsFOS: Physical sciencesQC770-798Scintillator7. Clean energy01 natural sciencesNOPE2_2Nuclear and particle physics. Atomic energy. Radioactivity0103 physical sciences[PHYS.HEXP]Physics [physics]/High Energy Physics - Experiment [hep-ex]ddc:530Sensitivity (control systems)010306 general physicsPhysicsJUNOliquid [scintillation counter]010308 nuclear & particles physicsbusiness.industryDetectorSettore FIS/01 - Fisica Sperimentaleradioactivity [background]suppression [background]Instrumentation and Detectors (physics.ins-det)Monte Carlo [numerical calculations]Nuclear powerthreshold [energy]sensitivityNeutrino Detectors and Telescopes (experiments)GEANTNeutrinobusinessEnergy (signal processing)
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