Background:The neutron β-decay asymmetry parameter A 0 defines the angular correlation between the spin of the neutron and the momentum of the emitted electron. Values for A 0 permit an extraction of the ratio of the weak axial-vector to vector coupling constants, λ ≡ g A /g V , which under assumption of the conserved vector current hypothesis (g V = 1) determines g A . Precise values for g A are important as a benchmark for lattice QCD calculations and as a test of the standard model. Purpose: The UCNA experiment, carried out at the Ultracold Neutron (UCN) source at the Los Alamos Neutron Science Center, was the first measurement of any neutron β-decay angular correlation performed with UCN. This article reports the most precise result for A 0 obtained to date from the UCNA experiment, as a result of higher statistics and reduced key systematic uncertainties, including from the neutron polarization and the characterization of the electron detector response. Methods: UCN produced via the downscattering of moderated spallation neutrons in a solid deuterium crystal were polarized via transport through a 7 T polarizing magnet and a spin flipper, which permitted selection of either spin state. The UCN were then contained within a 3-m long cylindrical decay volume, situated along the central axis of a superconducting 1 T solenoidal spectrometer. With the neutron spins then oriented parallel or anti-parallel to the solenoidal field, an asymmetry in the numbers of emitted decay electrons detected in two electron detector packages located on both ends of the spectrometer permitted an extraction of A 0 .
A new measurement of the neutron β-decay asymmetry A 0 has been carried out by the UCNA Collaboration using polarized ultracold neutrons (UCNs) from the solid deuterium UCN source at the Los Alamos Neutron Science Center. Improvements in the experiment have led to reductions in both statistical and systematic uncertainties leading to A 0 = −0.11954(55) stat (98) Precision measurements of neutron β decay are an essential ingredient in understanding the electro-weak interaction in the light quark sector. In particular the axial-vector weak coupling constant, g A , is an important input to understanding the spin and flavor structure of the nucleon [1,2] and is being actively studied in detailed lattice QCD calculations [3,4]. It also plays an important role in a variety of astrophysical processes, including solar fusion cross sections important for energy and neutrino production in the Sun [5].The angular distribution of emitted electrons from decays of a polarized neutron ensemble can be expressed as [6]where A(E) specifies the decay asymmetry for electron energy E, v ≡ βc is the electron velocity, P is the mean neutron polarization, and θ is the angle between the neutron spin and the electron momentum. can be expressed aswhere λ ≡ g A /g V is the ratio of the vector to axial-vector weak coupling constants. Combining g A with independent measurements of the Fermi coupling constant G F , the Cabibbo-Kobayashi-Maskawa matrix element V ud , and the neutron lifetime τ n allows a precision test of the consistency of measured neutron β-decay observables [7]. The ultracold neutron asymmetry (UCNA) experiment is the first experiment to use ultracold neutrons (UCNs) in a precision measurement of neutron decay correlations. Following the publication of our earlier results [7][8][9], the UCNA Collaboration implemented a number of experimental improvements that led to reductions in both statistical and systematic uncertainties. These improvements, described below, include enhanced UCN storage, improved electron energy reconstruction, and continuous monitoring of the magnetic field in the spectrometer. This refined treatment of the systematic corrections and uncertainties begins to address issues of consistency in the world data set for A 0 .The UCNA experiment ran in 2010 using the "thin window geometry D" as described in [7,9], and collected a total of 20.6 × 10 6 β-decay events after all cuts were applied. We used the UCN source [10] Copyright by the American Physical Society. Mendenhall, M. P. ; Pattie, R. W., Jr. ; Bagdasarova, Y. ; et al., Mar 25, 2013. "Precision measurement of the neutron beta-decay asymmetry," PHYSICAL REVIEW C 87(3): 032501.
The ultracold neutron (UCN) source at Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL), which uses solid deuterium as the UCN converter and is driven by accelerator spallation neutrons, has been successfully operated for over 10 years, providing UCN to various experiments, as the first production UCN source based on the superthermal process. It has recently undergone a major upgrade. This paper describes the design and performance of the upgraded LANL UCN source. Measurements of the cold neutron spectrum and UCN density are presented and compared to Monte Carlo predictions. The source is shown to perform as modeled. The UCN density measured at the exit of the biological shield was 184(32) UCN/cm 3 , a four-fold increase from the highest previously reported. The polarized UCN density stored in an external chamber was measured to be 39(7) UCN/cm 3 , which is sufficient to perform an experiment to search for the nonzero neutron electric dipole moment with a one-standard-deviation sensitivity of σ(dn) = 3 × 10 −27 e·cm.
The Borexino detector measures solar neutrino fluxes via neutrino-electron elastic scattering. Observed spectra are determined by the solar-ν e survival probability P ee (E), and the chiral couplings of the neutrino and electron. Some theories of physics beyond the Standard Model postulate the existence of Non-Standard Interactions (NSI's) which modify the chiral couplings and P ee (E). In this paper, we search for such NSI's, in particular, flavor-diagonal neutral current interactions that modify the ν e e and ν τ e couplings using Borexino Phase II data. Standard Solar Model predictions of the solar neutrino fluxes for both high-and low-metallicity assumptions are considered. No indication of new physics is found at the level of sensitivity of the detector and constraints on the parameters of the NSI's are placed. In addition, with the same dataset the value of sin 2 θ W is obtained with a precision comparable to that achieved in reactor antineutrino experiments.
It has been proposed recently that a previously unobserved neutron decay branch to a dark matter particle (χ ) could account for the discrepancy in the neutron lifetime observed in experiments that use two different measurement techniques. One of the possible final states discussed includes a single χ along with an e + e − pair. We use data from the UCNA (Ultracold Neutron Asymmetry) experiment to set limits on this decay channel. Coincident electron-like events are detected with ∼4π acceptance using a pair of detectors that observe a volume of stored ultracold neutrons. The summed kinetic energy (E e + e − ) from such events is used to set limits, as a function of the χ mass, on the branching fraction for this decay channel. For χ masses consistent with resolving the neutron lifetime discrepancy, we exclude this as the dominant dark matter decay channel at 5σ level for 100 < E e + e − < 644 keV. If the χ + e + e − final state is not the only one, we set limits on its branching fraction of <10 −4 for the above E e + e − range at >90% confidence level.
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