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16–21 Sep 2024
Argonne National Laboratory
US/Central timezone

Neutrino Interaction Measurement Capabilities of the SBND Experiment

19 Sep 2024, 16:15
24m
Auditorium (#402)

Auditorium

#402

Talk: in-person WG2: Neutrino Scattering Physics Parallel: WG2

Speaker

Leonidas Aliaga Soplin (University of Texas at Arlington)

Description

The Short-Baseline Near Detector (SBND) is a 100-ton scale Liquid Argon Time Projection Chamber (LArTPC) neutrino detector positioned in the Booster Neutrino Beam at Fermilab, as part of the Short-Baseline Neutrino (SBN) program. The detector is currently being commissioned and is collecting neutrino beam data. Located only 110 m from the neutrino production target, it will be exposed to a very high flux of neutrinos and will collect millions of neutrino interactions each year. This huge number of neutrino interactions with the precise tracking and calorimetric capabilities of LArTPC will enable a wealth of cross section measurements with unprecedented precision. In addition, SBND has the unique characteristic of being remarkably close to the neutrino source and not perfectly aligned with the neutrino beamline, in such a way that allows sampling of multiple neutrino fluxes using the same detector, a feature known as SBND-PRISM. SBND-PRISM can be utilized to study distinctive neutrino-nucleus interactions channels. This talk will present the current status of the experiment along with expectations for a rich cross section program ahead.

Working Group WG 2: Neutrino Scattering Physics

Primary authors

Andrew Furmanski Vishvas Pandey (Fermilab) Leonidas Aliaga Soplin (University of Texas at Arlington)

Presentation materials