SBU HEP Seminar - Davide Sgalaberna (ETH Zurich) - New developments in scintillator-based technologies for neutrino detectors
Graduate Building D-122
Stony Brook University
Title: New developments in scintillator-based technologies for neutrino detectors
Speaker: Davide Sgalaberna
Abstract: The new generation long-baseline neutrino oscillation experiments, DUNE in US andHyper-Kamiokande in Japan, will start in a few years with a five standard deviation sensitivity to the discovery of the leptonic CP violation and the determination of the neutrino mass ordering. Being affected by a much lower statistical uncertainty compared tothe ongoing experiments, T2K and NOvA, the suppression of systematic uncertaintiesbecomes critical. This highlights the need for new detector technologies to be deployed at the near detector complex and novel analysis techniques to precisely measure the electron neutrino cross section with massive near detector, resolve the so-called nuclear effects by tracking very short protons and reconstructing the neutron kinetic energy, and detect neutrino interactions in different target nuclei. The R&D program at ETH Zurich aims to develop new technologies towards a multi-tonne highly-segmented scintillator detector as well as a high-resolution scintillating tracker. The most recent developments as well as new analysis methods will be discussed.