The ProtoDUNE-SP detector is a single-phase liquid argon time projection chamber with an active volume of 7.2× 6.1× 7.0 m3. It is installed at the CERN Neutrino Platform in a specially-constructed beam that delivers charged pions, kaons, protons, muons and electrons with momenta in the range 0.3 GeV/c to 7 GeV/c. Beam line instrumentation provides accurate momentum measurements and particle identification. The ProtoDUNE-SP detector is a prototype for the first far detector module of the Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment, and it incorporates full-size components as designed for that module. This paper describes the beam line, the time projection chamber, the photon detectors, the cosmic-ray tagger, the signal processing and particle reconstruction. It presents the first results on ProtoDUNE-SP's performance, including noise and gain measurements, dE/dx calibration for muons, protons, pions and electrons, drift electron lifetime measurements, and photon detector noise, signal sensitivity and time resolution measurements. The measured values meet or exceed the specifications for the DUNE far detector, in several cases by large margins. ProtoDUNE-SP's successful operation starting in 2018 and its production of large samples of high-quality data demonstrate the effectiveness of the single-phase far detector design.
Results are reported from a joint analysis of Phase I and Phase II data from the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory. The effective electron kinetic energy threshold used is T eff = 3.5 MeV, the lowest analysis threshold yet achieved with water Cherenkov detector data. In units of 10 6 cm −2 s −1 , the total flux of active-flavor neutrinos from 8 B decay in the Sun measured using the neutral current (NC) reaction of neutrinos on deuterons, with no constraint on the 8 B neutrino energy spectrum, is found to be NC = 5.140 +0.160 −0.158 (stat) +0.132 −0.117 (syst). These uncertainties are more than a factor of 2 smaller than previously published results. Also presented are the spectra of recoil electrons from the charged current reaction of neutrinos on deuterons and the elastic scattering of electrons. A fit to the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory data in which the free parameters directly describe the total 8 B neutrino flux and the energy-dependent ν e survival probability provides a measure of the total 8
The Sudbury Neutrino Observatory (SNO) used an array of 3 He proportional counters to measure the rate of neutral-current interactions in heavy water and precisely determined the total active (ν x ) 8 B solar neutrino flux. This technique is independent of previous methods employed by SNO The Sudbury Neutrino Observatory [1] detects 8 B solar neutrinos through three reactions: charged-current interactions (CC) on deuterons, in which only electron neutrinos participate; neutrino-electron elastic scattering (ES), which are dominated by contributions from electron neutrinos; and neutral-current (NC) disintegration of the deuteron by neutri-
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