A Letter of Intent to Build a MiniBooNE Near Detector: BooNE

Abstract

There is accumulating evidence for a difference between neutrino and antineutrino oscillations at the 1 eV2 scale. The MiniBooNE experiment observes an unexplained excess of electron-like events at low energies in neutrino mode, which may be due, for example, to either a neutral current radiative interaction, sterile neutrino decay, or to neutrino oscillations involving sterile neutrinos and which may be related to the LSND signal. No excess of electron-like events (-0.5 7.8 8.7), however, is observed so far at low energies in antineutrino mode. Furthermore, global 3+1 and 3+2 sterile neutrino fits to the world neutrino and antineutrino data suggest a difference between neutrinos and antineutrinos with significant (22θμ μ 35%) μ disappearance. In order to test whether the low-energy excess is due to neutrino oscillations and whether there is a difference between μ and μ disappearance, we propose building a second MiniBooNE detector at (or moving the existing MiniBooNE detector to) a distance of 200 m from the Booster Neutrino Beam (BNB) production target. With identical detectors at different distances, most of the systematic errors will cancel when taking a ratio of events in the two detectors, as the neutrino flux varies as 1/r2 to a calculable approximation. This will allow sensitive tests of oscillations for both e and e appearance and μ and μ disappearance. Furthermore, a comparison between oscillations in neutrino mode and antineutrino mode will allow a sensitive search for CP and CPT violation in the lepton sector at short baseline ( m2 > 0.1 eV2).

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