Bulletin of the American Physical Society
APS April Meeting 2020
Volume 65, Number 2
Saturday–Tuesday, April 18–21, 2020; Washington D.C.
Session G02: Accelerator Based Neutrino PhysicsInvited Live
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Sponsoring Units: DPF Chair: Elizabeth Worcester, BNL Room: Washington 1 |
Sunday, April 19, 2020 8:30AM - 9:06AM Live |
G02.00001: Probing Neutrino Oscillations at Long Baselines Invited Speaker: Lisa Koerner Long-baseline experiments have played an important role in our understanding of neutrino mixing and oscillations. Current long-baseline neutrino oscillation experiments have observed electron neutrino appearance and made precision measurements of the parameters governing muon neutrino disappearance. In this talk, I will give an overview of the long-baseline concept, results from currently-running experiments, and prospects for next-generation experiments. I will discuss what these experiments can contribute to answering some of the remaining questions in neutrino oscillation physics, including (1) Is CP violated in neutrino oscillations? (2) What is the ordering of the neutrino masses? and (3) Is there maximal mixing? [Preview Abstract] |
Sunday, April 19, 2020 9:06AM - 9:42AM Live |
G02.00002: Status and prospects of short-baseline neutrino oscillation experiments Invited Speaker: Xiao Luo The discovery of neutrino oscillations (2015 Nobel Prize) and measurement of oscillation parameters have established a beautiful 3-$\nu$ paradigm in the past decades. However, anomalies have been observed from accelerator-based neutrino, reactor, and Gallium experiments, hinting at possible new physics beyond the Standard Model. Guided by these experimental hints, a comprehensive short baseline neutrino oscillation program is actively engaged in directly addressing the origin(s) of the previously observed anomalies, and explore a wide range of new physics models. This review talk will describe the experiments in the short-baseline neutrino oscillation program and their complementarity in searching for new physics. The latest results and future prospects of these experiments will be presented. [Preview Abstract] |
Sunday, April 19, 2020 9:42AM - 10:18AM Live |
G02.00003: Beyond the Standard Model physics with accelerator neutrino experiments Invited Speaker: Peter Denton Neutrino physics is a broad and diverse field, both experimentally and theoretically. As the standard oscillation picture begins to settle we are moving into an era where precise tests of the neutrino picture can be made. In this talk I will discuss the present and future status of many theoretical probes and a broad range of accelerator experiments. In particular, I will highlight the strongly interconnected nature of new physics studies in the neutrino sector. [Preview Abstract] |
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