6533b82cfe1ef96bd128f4ab

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Studying neutrinos at the LHC: FASER and its impact to the cosmic-ray physics

Michaela Queitsch-maitlandMitsuhiro NakamuraShih-chieh HsuGang ZhanUmut KoseOndrej TheinerYannick FavreFelix KlingM. T. PrimHiroki RokujoSergio Gonzalez-sevillaBrian PetersenCharlotte CavanaghClaire AntelCarlo Enrico PandiniHelena LefebvreF. PietropaoloLydia BrennerZhen HuStephen GibsonFlorian Urs BernlochnerDi WangSebastian TrojanowskiYosuke TakuboLaurie NevayTobias BoeckhDeion FellersCarl GwilliamSusanne KuehnMarzio NessiDidier FerrereJosh McfaydenBenedikt VormwaldTomohiro InadaJohn SpencerLorne LevinsonHidetoshi OtonoPaola ScampoliGiuseppe IacobucciAkitaka ArigaKe LiHao PangAnna SfyrlaEnrique KajomovitzYoav AfikS. MeehanMonica D'onofrioDimitar MladenovFrancesco CeruttiChiara MaglioccaTomoko ArigaAndrea CoccaroSune JakobsenLorenzo PaolozziJamie BoydSavannah ShivelyFranck CadouxJinfeng LiuCandan DozenOsamu SatoToshiyuki NakanoFilippo ResnatiEric TorrenceFriedemann NeuhausKristof SchmiedenSerhan TufanliMatthias SchottJakob Salfeld-nebgenXin ChenHenso AbreuDavid William Casper

subject

PhysicsAstrophysics and AstronomyParticle physicsLarge Hadron ColliderPhysics::Instrumentation and DetectorsAstrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical PhenomenaHigh Energy Physics::PhenomenologyHigh Energy Physics::ExperimentCosmic rayNeutrino

description

Studies of high energy proton interactions have been basic inputs to understand the cosmic-ray spectra observed on the earth. Yet, the experimental knowledge with controlled beams has been limited. In fact, uncertainties of the forward hadron production are very large due to the lack of experimental data. The FASER experiment is proposed to measure particles, such as neutrinos and hypothetical dark-sector particles, at the forward location of the 14 TeV proton-proton collisions at the LHC. As it corresponds to 100-PeV proton interactions in fixed target mode, a precise measurement by FASER would provide information relevant for PeV-scale cosmic rays. By studying three flavor neutrinos with the dedicated neutrino detector (FASER$\nu$), FASER will lead to a quantitative understanding of prompt neutrinos, which is an important background towards the astrophysical neutrino observation by neutrino telescopes such as IceCube. In particular, the electron and tau neutrinos have strong links with charmed hadron production. And, the FASER measurements may also shed light on the unresolved muon puzzle at the high energy. FASER is going to start taking data in 2022. We expect about 8000 numu, 1300 nue and 20 nutau CC interactions at the TeV energy scale during Run 3 of the LHC operation (2022-2024) with a 1.1 tons emulsion-based neutrino detector. We report here the overview and prospect of the FASER experiment in relation to the cosmic-ray physics, together with the first LHC neutrino candidates that we caught in the pilot run held in 2018.

https://doi.org/10.22323/1.395.1025