4 resultados para baryon asymmetry
em AMS Tesi di Laurea - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna
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.
Resumo:
Grand Unification Theories (GUTs) predict the unification of three of the fundamental forces and are a possible extension of the Standard Model, some of them predict neutrino mass and baryon asymmetry. We consider a minimal non-supersymmetric $SO(10)$ GUT model that can reproduce the observed fermionic masses and mixing parameters of the Standard Model. We calculate the scales of spontaneous symmetry breaking from the GUT to the Standard Model gauge group using two-loop renormalisation group equations. This procedure determines the proton decay rate and the scale of $U(1)_{B-L}$ breaking, which generates cosmic strings, and the right-handed neutrino mass scales. Consequently, the regions of parameter space where thermal leptogenesis is viable are identified and correlated with the fermion masses and mixing, the neutrinoless double beta decay rate, the proton decay rate, and the gravitational wave signal resulting from the network of cosmic strings. We demonstrate that this framework, which can explain the Standard Model fermion masses and mixing and the observed baryon asymmetry, will be highly constrained by the next generation of gravitational wave detectors and neutrino oscillation experiments which will also constrain the proton lifetime
Measurement of CP asymmetries in $\lambda^0_b \to pk^-$ and $\lambda^0_b \to p \pi^-$ decays at LHCb
Resumo:
The LHCb experiment has been designed to perform precision measurements in the flavour physics sector at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) located at CERN. After the recent observation of CP violation in the decay of the Bs0 meson to a charged pion-kaon pair at LHCb, it is interesting to see whether the same quark-level transition in Λ0b baryon decays gives rise to large CP-violating effects. Such decay processes involve both tree and penguin Feynman diagrams and could be sensitive probes for physics beyond the Standard Model. The measurement of the CP-violating observable defined as ∆ACP = ACP(Λ0b → pK−)−ACP(Λ0b →pπ−),where ACP(Λ0b →pK−) and ACP(Λ0b →pπ−) are the direct CP asymmetries in Λ0b → pK− and Λ0b → pπ− decays, is presented for the first time using LHCb data. The procedure followed to optimize the event selection, to calibrate particle identification, to parametrise the various components of the invariant mass spectra, and to compute corrections due to the production asymmetry of the initial state and the detection asymmetries of the final states, is discussed in detail. Using the full 2011 and 2012 data sets of pp collisions collected with the LHCb detector, corresponding to an integrated luminosity of about 3 fb−1, the value ∆ACP = (0.8 ± 2.1 ± 0.2)% is obtained. The first uncertainty is statistical and the second corresponds to one of the dominant systematic effects. As the result is compatible with zero, no evidence of CP violation is found. This is the most precise measurement of CP violation in the decays of baryons containing the b quark to date. Once the analysis will be completed with an exhaustive study of systematic uncertainties, the results will be published by the LHCb Collaboration.
Resumo:
Il quark-gluon plasma (QGP) è uno stato della materia previsto dalla cromodinamica quantistica. L’esperimento ALICE a LHC ha tra i suoi obbiettivi principali lo studio della materia fortemente interagente e le proprietà del QGP attraverso collisioni di ioni pesanti ultra-relativistici. Per un’esaustiva comprensione di tali proprietà, le stesse misure effettuate su sistemi collidenti più piccoli (collisioni protone-protone e protone-ione) sono necessarie come riferimento. Le recenti analisi dei dati raccolti ad ALICE hanno mostrato che la nostra comprensione dei meccanismi di adronizzazione di quark pesanti non è completa, perchè i dati ottenuti in collisioni pp e p-Pb non sono riproducibili utilizzando modelli basati sui risultati ottenuti con collisioni e+e− ed ep. Per questo motivo, nuovi modelli teorici e fenomenologici, in grado di riprodurre le misure sperimentali, sono stati proposti. Gli errori associati a queste nuove misure sperimentali al momento non permettono di verificare in maniera chiara la veridicità dei diversi modelli proposti. Nei prossimi anni sarà quindi fondamentale aumentare la precisione di tali misure sperimentali; d’altra parte, stimare il numero delle diverse specie di particelle prodotte in una collisione può essere estremamente complicato. In questa tesi, il numero di barioni Lc prodotti in un campione di dati è stato ottenuto utilizzando delle tecniche di machine learning, in grado di apprendere pattern e imparare a distinguere candidate di segnale da quelle di fondo. Si sono inoltre confrontate tre diverse implementazioni di un algoritmo di Boosted Decision Trees (BDT) e si è utilizzata quella più performante per ricostruire il barione Lc in collisioni pp raccolte dall’esperimento ALICE.