6533b7d8fe1ef96bd126abe6
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Measurement ofK+production cross section by 8 GeV protons using high-energy neutrino interactions in the SciBooNE detector
G. Jover-manasP. GuzowskiC. D. MooreG. P. ZellerY. NakajimaC. MarianiP. F. LoverreE. D. ZimmermanH. B. WhiteR. J. TesarekMasashi YokoyamaG. KaragiorgiP. NienaberZ. DjurcicKendall MahnY. UchidaJanet ConradAndrew J. HansonA. J. FrankeJ. J. WaldingM. O. WasckoD. A. FinleyS. MasuikeS. MizugashiraMinoru OtaniM. TanakaR. J. StefanskiKatsuki HiraideTsuyoshi NakayaL. BugelTeppei KatoriY. KobayashiA. D. RussellH. TakeiD. OrmeI. TaylorFederico SanchezT. A. ShibataG. ChengR. G. Van De WaterC. GigantiR. NaporaH. KuboU. DoreV. T. McgaryY. KurimotoJ. Catala-perezJ. L. Alcaraz-aunionG. B. MillsG. MitsukaKodai MatsuokaT. KobilarcikY. HayatoS. J. BriceM. H. ShaevitzL. LudoviciM. SorelW. C. LouisRex TayloeW. MetcalfJ.j. Gómez-cadenasH. K. TanakaY. Miyachisubject
PhysicsNuclear and High Energy PhysicsParticle physicsProtonMesonHadronNuclear physicsAntimatterHigh Energy Physics::ExperimentMuon neutrinoFermilabNeutrinoNuclear ExperimentLeptondescription
The SciBooNE Collaboration reports K+ production cross section and rate measurements using high energy daughter muon neutrino scattering data off the SciBar polystyrene (C8H8) target in the SciBooNE detector. The K+ mesons are produced by 8 GeV protons striking a beryllium target in Fermilab Booster Neutrino Beam line (BNB). Using observed neutrino and antineutrino events in SciBooNE, we measure d2σ/dpdΩ = (5.34 ±0.76) mb/(GeV/c x sr) for p + Be =K+ + X at mean K+ energy of 3.9 GeV and angle (with respect to the proton beam direction) of 3.7 degrees, corresponding to the selected K+ sample. Compared to Monte Carlo predictions using previous higher energy K+ production measurements, this measurement, which uses the NUANCE neutrino interaction generator, is consistent with a normalization factor of 0.85 ± 0.12. This agreement is evidence that the extrapolation of the higher energy K+ measurements to an 8 GeV beam energy using Feynman scaling is valid. This measurement reduces the error on the K+ production cross section from 40% to 14%.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2011-07-28 | Physical Review D |