3 resultados para Lepton-Flavor Violation
em AMS Tesi di Laurea - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna
Resumo:
According to the SM, while Lepton Flavour Violation is allowed in the neutral sector, Charged Lepton Flavour Violation (CLFV) processes are forbidden. The Mu2e Experiment at Fermilab will search for the CLFV process of neutrinoless conversion of a muon into an electron within the field of an Al nucleus. The Mu2e detectors and its state-of-the-art superconducting magnetic system are presented, with special focus put to the electromagnetic crystal calorimeter. The calorimeter is composed by two annular disks, each one hosting pure CsI crystals read-out by custom silicon photomultipliers (SiPMs). The SiPMs are amplified by custom electronics (FEE) and are glued to copper holders in group of 2 SiPMs and 2 FEE boards thus forming a crystal Readout Unit. These Readout Units are being tested at the Quality Control (QC) Station, whose design, realization and operations are presented in this work. The QC Station allows to determine the gain, the response and the photon detection efficiency of each unit and to evaluate the dependence of these parameters from the supply voltage and temperature. The station is powered by two remotely-controlled power supplies and monitored thanks to a Slow Control system which is also illustrated in this work. In this thesis, we also demonstrated that the calorimeter can perform its own measurement of the Mu2e normalization factor, i.e. the counting of the 1.8 MeV photon line produced in nuclear muon captures. A specific calorimeter sub-system called CAPHRI, composed by four LYSO crystals with SiPM readout, has been designed and tested. We simulated the capability of this system on performing this task showing that it can get a faster and more reliable measurement of the muon capture rates with respect to the current Mu2e detector dedicated to this measurement. The characterization of energy resolution and response uniformity of the four procured LYSO crystals are llustrated.
Resumo:
The LHCb experiment at the LHC, by exploiting the high production cross section for $c\overline{c}$ quark pairs, offers the possibility to investigate $\mathcal{CP}$ violation in the charm sector with a very high precision.\\ In this thesis a measurement of time-integrated \(\mathcal{CP}\) violation using $D^0\rightarrow~K^+K^-$ and $D^0\rightarrow \pi^+\pi^-$ decays at LHCb is presented. The measured quantity is the difference ($\Delta$) of \(\mathcal{CP}\) asymmetry ($\mathcal{A}_{\mathcal{CP}}$) between the decay rates of $D^0$ and $\overline{D}^0$ mesons into $K^+K^–$ and $\pi^+\pi^-$ pairs.\\ The analysis is performed on 2011 data, collected at \(\sqrt{s}=7\) TeV and corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 1 fb\(^{-1}\), and 2012 data, collected at \(\sqrt{s}=8\) TeV and corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 2 fb\(^{-1}\).\\ A complete study of systematic uncertainties is beyond the aim of this thesis. However the most important systematic of the previous analysis has been studied. We find that this systematic uncertainty was due to a statistical fluctuation and then we demonstrate that it is no longer necessary to take into account.\\ By combining the 2011 and 2012 results, the final statistical precision is 0.08\%. When this analysis will be completed and published, this will be the most precise single measurement in the search for $\mathcal{CP}$ violation in the charm sector.
Resumo:
The discovery of the neutrino mass is a direct evidence of new physics. Several questions arise from this observation, regarding the mechanism originating the neutrino masses and their hierarchy, the violation of lepton number conservation and the generation of the baryon asymmetry. These questions can be addressed by the experimental search for neutrinoless double beta (0\nu\beta\beta) decay, a nuclear decay consisting of two simultaneous beta emissions without the emission of two antineutrinos. 0\nu\beta\beta decay is possible only if neutrinos are identical to antineutrinos, namely if they are Majorana particles. Several experiments are searching for 0\nu\beta\beta decay. Among these, CUORE is employing 130Te embedded in TeO_2 bolometric crystals. It needs to have an accurate understanding of the background contribution in the energy region around the Q-value of 130Te. One of the main contributions is given by particles from the decay chains of contaminating nuclei (232Th, 235-238U) present in the active crystals or in the support structure. This thesis uses the 1 ton yr CUORE data to study these contamination by looking for events belonging to sub-chains of the Th and U decay chains and reconstructing their energy and time difference distributions in a delayed coincidence analysis. These results in combination with studies on the simulated data are then used to evaluate the contaminations. This is the first time this analysis is applied to the CUORE data and this thesis highlights the feasibility of it while providing a starting point for further studies. A part of the obtained results agrees with ones from previous analysis, demonstrating that delayed coincidence searches might improve the understanding of the CUORE experiment background. This kind of delayed coincidence analysis can also be reused in the future once the, CUORE upgrade, CUPID data will be ready to be analyzed, with the aim of improving the sensitivity to the 0\nu\beta\beta decay of 100Mo.