4.8 Article

QED radiative corrections for accelerator neutrinos

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-022-32974-x

Keywords

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Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of High Energy Physics [DE-SC0019095, DESC0008475]
  2. Fermi Research Alliance, LLC [DE-AC02-07CH11359]
  3. United States Department of Energy
  4. Universities Research Association
  5. US Department of Energy through the Los Alamos National Laboratory
  6. National Nuclear Security Administration of U.S. Department of Energy [89233218CNA000001]
  7. LANL's Laboratory Directed Research and Development (LDRD/PRD) program [20210968PRD4]
  8. KITP Graduate Fellow program by Heising-Simons Foundation
  9. Simons Foundation
  10. National Science Foundation [NSF PHY-1748958]
  11. Neutrino Theory Network at Fermilab
  12. Fermilab Intensity Frontier Fellowship
  13. University of Rochester's Steven Chu Professorship in Physics

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Neutrino oscillation experiments aim to establish charge-parity violation by measuring the rate of neutrino appearance and disappearance in a beam, but are influenced by theoretical constraints and corrections. Using a factorization theorem helps minimize uncertainties in predicting neutrino cross-section ratios.
Neutrino oscillation experiments at accelerator energies aim to establish charge-parity violation in the neutrino sector by measuring the energy-dependent rate of nu(e) appearance and nu(mu) disappearance in a nu(mu) beam. These experiments can precisely measure nu(mu) cross sections at near detectors, but nu(e) cross sections are poorly constrained and require theoretical inputs. In particular, quantum electrodynamics radiative corrections are different for electrons and muons. These corrections are proportional to the small quantum electrodynamics coupling alpha approximate to 1/137; however, the large separation of scales between the neutrino energy and the proton mass (similar to GeV), and the electron mass and soft-photon detection thresholds (similar to MeV) introduces large logarithms in the perturbative expansion. The resulting flavor differences exceed the percent-level experimental precision and depend on nonperturbative hadronic structure. We establish a factorization theorem for exclusive charged-current (anti)neutrino scattering cross sections representing them as a product of two factors. The first factor is flavor universal; it depends on hadronic and nuclear structure and can be constrained by high-statistics nu(mu) data. The second factor is non-universal and contains logarithmic enhancements, but can be calculated exactly in perturbation theory. For charged-current elastic scattering, we demonstrate the cancellation of uncertainties in the predicted ratio of nu(e) and nu(mu) cross sections. We point out the potential impact of non-collinear energetic photons and the distortion of the visible lepton spectra, and provide precise predictions for inclusive observables.

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