The Precision Reactor Oscillation and Spectrum Experiment, PROSPECT, is designed to make a precise measurement of the antineutrino spectrum from a highly-enriched uranium reactor and probe eV-scale sterile neutrinos by searching for neutrino oscillations over meter-long distances. PROSPECT is conceived as a 2-phase experiment utilizing segmented 6 Li-doped liquid scintillator detectors for both efficient detection of reactor antineutrinos through the inverse beta decay reaction and excellent background discrimination. PROSPECT Phase I consists of a movable 3-ton antineutrino detector at distances of 7-12 m from the reactor core. It will probe the best-fit point of the ν e disappearance experiments at 4σ in 1 year and the favored region of the sterile neutrino parameter space at >3σ in 3 years. With a second antineutrino detector at 15-19 m from the reactor, Phase II of PROSPECT can probe the entire allowed parameter space below 10 eV 2 at 5σ in 3 additional years. The measurement of the reactor antineutrino spectrum and the search for short-baseline oscillations with PROSPECT will test the origin of the spectral deviations observed in recent θ 13 experiments, search for sterile neutrinos, and conclusively address the hypothesis of sterile neutrinos as an explanation of the reactor anomaly.
Building on the framework of Zhang & Shu [1,2], we develop a realizability-preserving method to simulate the transport of particles (fermions) through a background material using a two-moment model that evolves the angular moments of a phase space distribution function f . The two-moment model is closed using algebraic moment closures; e.g., as proposed by Cernohorsky & Bludman [3] and Banach & Larecki [4]. Variations of this model have recently been used to simulate neutrino transport in nuclear astrophysics applications, including core-collapse supernovae and compact binary mergers. We employ the discontinuous Galerkin (DG) method for spatial discretization (in part to capture the asymptotic diffusion limit of the model) combined with implicit-explicit (IMEX) time integration to stably bypass short timescales induced by frequent interactions between particles and the background. Appropriate care is taken to ensure the method preserves strict algebraic bounds on the evolved moments (particle density and flux) as dictated by Pauli's exclusion principle, which demands a bounded distribution function (i.e., f ∈ [0, 1]). This realizability-preserving scheme combines a suitable CFL condition, a realizability-enforcing limiter, a closure procedure based on Fermi-Dirac statistics, and an IMEX scheme whose stages can be written as a convex combination of forward Euler steps combined with a backward Euler step. The IMEX scheme is formally only first-order accurate, but works well in the diffusion limit, and -without interactions with the background -reduces to the optimal second-order strong stability-preserving explicit Runge-Kutta scheme of Shu & Osher [5]. Numerical results demonstrate the realizability-preserving properties of the scheme. We also demonstrate that the use of algebraic moment closures not based on Fermi-Dirac statistics can lead to unphysical moments in the context of fermion transport. (Ran Chu), endevee@ornl.gov (Eirik Endeve), hauckc@ornl.gov (Cory D. Hauck), mezz@utk.edu (Anthony Mezzacappa) both spectral and finite volume methods and are an attractive option for solving hyperbolic partial differential equations (PDEs). They achieve high-order accuracy on a compact stencil; i.e., data is only communicated with nearest neighbors, regardless of the formal order of accuracy, which can lead to a high computation to communication ratio, and favorable parallel scalability on heterogeneous architectures has been demonstrated [32]. Furthermore, they can easily be applied to problems involving curvilinear coordinates (e.g., beneficial in numerical relativity [33]). Importantly, DG methods exhibit favorable properties when collisions with a background are included, as they recover the correct asymptotic behavior in the diffusion limit, characterized by frequent collisions (e.g., [34,35,36]). The DG method was introduced in the 1970s by Reed & Hill [37] to solve the neutron transport equation, and has undergone remarkable developments since then (see, e.g., [38] and references therein).We are concerned with t...
Current models of antineutrino production in nuclear reactors predict detection rates and spectra at odds with the existing body of direct reactor antineutrino measurements. High-resolution antineutrino detectors operated close to compact research reactor cores can produce new precision measurements useful in testing explanations for these observed discrepancies involving underlying nuclear or new physics. Absolute measurement of the 235 U-produced antineutrino spectrum can provide additional constraints for evaluating the accuracy of current and future reactor models, while relative measurements of spectral distortion between differing baselines can be used to search for oscillations arising from the existence of eV-scale sterile neutrinos. Such a measurement can be performed in the United States at several highly-enriched uranium fueled research reactors using near-surface segmented liquid scintillator detectors. We describe here the conceptual design and physics potential of the PROSPECT experiment, a U.S.-based, multi-phase experiment with reactor-detector baselines of 7-20 meters capable of addressing these and other physics and detector development goals. Current R&D status and future plans for PROSPECT detector deployment and data-taking at the High Flux Isotope Reactor at Oak Ridge National Laboratory will be discussed.
Research reactors host a wide range of activities that make use of the intense neutron fluxes generated at these facilities. Recent interest in performing measurements with relatively low event rates, e.g. reactor antineutrino detection, at these facilities necessitates a detailed understanding of background radiation fields. Both reactor-correlated and naturally occurring background sources are potentially important, even at levels well below those of importance for typical activities. Here we describe a comprehensive series of background assessments at three high-power research reactors, including γ-ray, neutron, and muon measurements. For each facility we describe the characteristics and identify the sources of the background fields encountered. The general understanding gained of background production mechanisms and their relationship to facility features will prove valuable for the planning of any sensitive measurement conducted therein. * Corresponding author Email address: nbowden@llnl.gov (N. S. Bowden) training, and fundamental physics investigations [1]. More than 250 research reactor facilities are operational or planned in 57 countries [2]. The large neutron flux generated by a controlled fission chain reaction enables such activities. Typically experiments are conducted within or close to the reactor core, or using neutron beams generated through the thermal moderation and collimation of fission neutrons. With the addition of specialized moderators at cryogenic temperatures, neu-
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