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1.
Phys Rev Lett ; 130(13): 131901, 2023 Mar 31.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37067303

RESUMEN

The Mu2e and COMET µâ†’e conversion experiments are expected to significantly advance limits on new sources of charged lepton flavor violation. Almost all theoretical work in the field has focused on just two operators. However, general symmetry arguments lead to a µâ†’e conversion rate with six response functions, each of which, in principle, is observable by varying nuclear properties of targets. We construct a nucleon-level nonrelativistic effective theory (NRET) to clarify the microscopic origin of these response functions and to relate rate measurements in different targets. This exercise identifies three operators and their small parameters that control the NRET operator expansion. We note inconsistencies in past treatments of these parameters. The NRET is technically challenging, involving 16 operators, several distorted electron partial waves, bound muon upper and lower components, and an exclusive nuclear matrix element. We introduce a trick for treating the electron Coulomb effects accurately, which enables us to include all of these effects while producing transition densities whose one-body matrix elements can be evaluated analytically, greatly simplifying the nuclear physics. We derive bounds on operator coefficients from existing and anticipated µâ†’e conversion experiments. We discuss how similar NRET formulations have impacted dark matter phenomenology, noting that the tools this community has developed could be adapted for charged lepton flavor violation studies.

2.
Phys Rev Lett ; 128(23): 232501, 2022 Jun 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35749172

RESUMEN

The Baksan Experiment on Sterile Transitions (BEST) was designed to investigate the deficit of electron neutrinos ν_{e} observed in previous gallium-based radiochemical measurements with high-intensity neutrino sources, commonly referred to as the "gallium anomaly," which could be interpreted as evidence for oscillations between ν_{e} and sterile neutrino (ν_{s}) states. A 3.414-MCi ^{51}Cr ν_{e} source was placed at the center of two nested Ga volumes and measurements were made of the production of ^{71}Ge through the charged current reaction, ^{71}Ga(ν_{e},e^{-})^{71}Ge, at two average distances. The measured production rates for the inner and the outer targets, respectively, are [54.9_{-2.4}^{+2.5}(stat)±1.4(syst)] and [55.6_{-2.6}^{+2.7}(stat)±1.4(syst)] atoms of ^{71}Ge/d. The ratio (R) of the measured rate of ^{71}Ge production at each distance to the expected rate from the known cross section and experimental efficiencies are R_{in}=0.79±0.05 and R_{out}=0.77±0.05. The ratio of the outer to the inner result is 0.97±0.07, which is consistent with unity within uncertainty. The rates at each distance were found to be similar, but 20%-24% lower than expected, thus reaffirming the anomaly. These results are consistent with ν_{e}→ν_{s} oscillations with a relatively large Δm^{2} (>0.5 eV^{2}) and mixing sin^{2}2θ (≈0.4).

3.
Nat Commun ; 7: 13639, 2016 11 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27873999

RESUMEN

About 4.6 billion years ago, some event disturbed a cloud of gas and dust, triggering the gravitational collapse that led to the formation of the solar system. A core-collapse supernova, whose shock wave is capable of compressing such a cloud, is an obvious candidate for the initiating event. This hypothesis can be tested because supernovae also produce telltale patterns of short-lived radionuclides, which would be preserved today as isotopic anomalies. Previous studies of the forensic evidence have been inconclusive, finding a pattern of isotopes differing from that produced in conventional supernova models. Here we argue that these difficulties either do not arise or are mitigated if the initiating supernova was a special type, low in mass and explosion energy. Key to our conclusion is the demonstration that short-lived 10Be can be readily synthesized in such supernovae by neutrino interactions, while anomalies in stable isotopes are suppressed.

4.
Phys Rev Lett ; 110(14): 141101, 2013 Apr 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25166974

RESUMEN

We present two new primary mechanisms for the synthesis of the rare nucleus (9)Be, both triggered by ν-induced production of (3)H followed by (4)He((3)H,γ)(7)Li in the He shells of core-collapse supernovae. For progenitors of ∼ 8M(⊙), (7)Li((3)H,n(0))(9)Be occurs during the rapid expansion of the shocked He shell. Alternatively, for ultra-metal-poor progenitors of ∼ 11-15 M(⊙), (7)Li(n,γ)(8)Li(n,γ)(9)Li(e(-)ν(e))(9)Be occurs with neutrons produced by (4)He(ν(e),e(+)n)(3)H, assuming a hard effective ν(e) spectrum from oscillations (which also leads to heavy element production through rapid neutron capture) and a weak explosion (so the (9)Be survives shock passage). We discuss the associated production of (7)Li and (11)B, noting patterns in LiBeB production that might distinguish the new mechanisms from others.

5.
Rep Prog Phys ; 75(3): 036901, 2012 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22790424

RESUMEN

An emerging theme in modern astrophysics is the connection between astronomical observations and the underlying physical phenomena that drive our cosmos. Both the mechanisms responsible for the observed astrophysical phenomena and the tools used to probe such phenomena-the radiation and particle spectra we observe-have their roots in atomic, molecular, condensed matter, plasma, nuclear and particle physics. Chemistry is implicitly included in both molecular and condensed matter physics. This connection is the theme of the present report, which provides a broad, though non-exhaustive, overview of progress in our understanding of the cosmos resulting from recent theoretical and experimental advances in what is commonly called laboratory astrophysics. This work, carried out by a diverse community of laboratory astrophysicists, is increasingly important as astrophysics transitions into an era of precise measurement and high fidelity modeling.

6.
Phys Rev Lett ; 106(20): 201104, 2011 May 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21668217

RESUMEN

We revisit a ν-driven r-process mechanism in the He shell of a core-collapse supernova, finding that it could succeed in early stars of metallicity Z ≲ 10⁻³ Z(⊙), at relatively low temperatures and neutron densities, producing A ~ 130 and 195 abundance peaks over ~10-20 s. The mechanism is sensitive to the ν emission model and to ν oscillations. We discuss the implications of an r process that could alter interpretations of abundance data from metal-poor stars, and point out the need for further calculations that include effects of the supernova shock.

7.
Phys Rev Lett ; 89(18): 182503, 2002 Oct 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12398593

RESUMEN

The effective interaction problem in nuclear physics is believed to be highly nonperturbative, requiring extended high-momentum spaces for accurate solution. We trace this to difficulties that arise at both short and long distances when the included space is defined in terms of a basis of harmonic oscillator Slater determinants. We show, in the simplest case of the deuteron, that both difficulties can be circumvented, yielding highly perturbative results in the potential even for modest (approximately 4 variant Planck's over 2pi omega) included spaces.

8.
Phys Rev Lett ; 86(23): 5247-50, 2001 Jun 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11384469

RESUMEN

Standard analyses of low-energy NN and nuclear parity-violating observables have been based on a pi-, rho-, and omega-exchange model capable of describing all five independent s-p partial waves. Here a parallel analysis is performed for the one-body, exchange-current, and nuclear polarization contributions to the anapole moments of 133Cs and 205Tl. The resulting constraints are not consistent, though there remains some degree of uncertainty in the nuclear structure analysis of the atomic moments.

9.
Science ; 216(4541): 51-4, 1982 Apr 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17809799

RESUMEN

It may be possible to determine the boron-8 solar neutrino flux, averaged over the past several million years, from the concentration of technetium-98 in molybdenite. The mass spectrometry of this system is greatly simplified by the absence of stable technetium isotopes, and the presence of the fission product technetium-99 provides a monitor of uiranium-induced backgrounds. This geochemical experiment could provide the first test of nonstandard solar models that suggest a relation between the chlorine-37 solar neutrino puzzle and the recent ice age.

10.
Science ; 210(4472): 897-9, 1980 Nov 21.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17800842

RESUMEN

Long-lived isotopes produced in the earth's crust by solar neutrinos may provide a method of probing secular variations in the rate of energy production in the sun's core. Only one isotope, calcium-41, appears to be suitable from the dual stand-points of reliable nuclear physics and manageable backgrounds. The proposed measurement also may be interesting in view of recent evidence for neutrino oscillations.

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