MicroBooNE investigations on the photon interpretation of the MiniBooNE low energy excess
Abstract
The MicroBooNE experiment is a liquid argon time projection chamber with 85-ton active volume at Fermilab, operated from 2015 to 2020 to collect neutrino data from Fermilab's Booster Neutrino Beam. One of MicroBooNE's physics goals is to investigate possible explanations of the low-energy excess observed by the MiniBooNE experiment in μ→ e neutrino oscillation measurements. MicroBooNE has performed searches to test hypothetical interpretations of the MiniBooNE low-energy excess, including the underestimation of the photon background or instrinic e background. This thesis presents MicroBooNE's searches for two neutral current (NC) single-photon production processes that contribute to the photon background of the MiniBooNE measurement: NC resonance production followed by radiative decay: → Nγ, and NC coherent single-photon production. Both searches take advantage of boosted decision trees to yield efficient background rejection, and a high-statistic NC π0 measurement to constrain dominant background, and make use of MicroBooNE's first three years of data. The NC → Nγ measurement yielded a bound on the radiative decay process at 2.3 times the predicted nominal rate at 90% confidence level (C.L.), disfavoring a candidate photon interpretation of the MiniBooNE low-energy excess as a factor of 3.18 times the nominal NC radiative decay rate at the 94.8% C.L. The NC coherent single photon measurement leads to the world's first experimental limit on the cross-section of this process below 1 GeV, of 1.49 × 10-41 cm2 at 90% C.L., corresponding to 24.0 times the nominal prediction.
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