Large-energy single hits at JUNO from atmospheric neutrinos and dark matter

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2022-05

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APS

Abstract

Large liquid scintillator detectors, such as JUNO, present a new opportunity to study neutral current events from the low-energy end of the atmospheric neutrinos, and possible new physics signals due to light dark matter. We carefully study the possibility of detecting “large-energy singles” (LES), i.e., events with visible scintillation energy >15  MeV, but no other associated tags. For an effective exposure of 20  kton−yr and considering only Standard Model physics, we expect the LES sample to contain ∼40 events from scattering on free protons and ∼108 events from interaction with carbon, from neutral-current interactions of atmospheric neutrinos. Backgrounds, largely due to 𝛽 decays of cosmogenic isotopes, are shown to be significant only below 15 MeV visible energy. The LES sample at JUNO can competitively probe a variety of new physics scenarios, such as boosted dark matter and annihilation of galactic dark matter to sterile neutrinos.

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Physics, JUNO, Solar and atmospheric neutrinos

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