Opportunities with Atmospheric Neutrinos (OWAN21)

Europe/London
Description

Cosmic particles bombarding Earth’s atmosphere provide a constant source of neutrinos. In the past, the study of these atmospheric neutrinos led to the celebrated discovery of neutrino oscillation; today, they are still extensively studied to better understand their fundamental properties and for their impact as a background for rare-event searches. Atmospheric neutrino observations in future flagship observatories like ANITA, DUNE, Hyper-Kamiokande, IceCube, JUNO, P-ONE, and SNO+ offer incredible opportunities to explore physics beyond the Standard Model of particle physics. 

The IoP Astroparticle Physics (APP) group will hold a one-day event to review the status of present-day atmospheric neutrino measurements and to identify possible unexplored opportunities in future experiments. 

The workshop will take place on 10 November (10:30-17:30) and will be held as a hybrid meeting with both in-person and virtual attendance possible. The in-person element will be hosted at the Institute of Physics (IOP) building at 37 Caledonian Rd, London N1 9BU. Although the event is free, registration is required due to space limitations for both in-person and online participation. Remote connection details will be provided later when registering with the Online Attendee Types. 

Limited travel funding will be available for students and early career researchers. Please contact the conference chair for more information.

Main website (link)

    • 10:30 10:55
      Welcome coffee 25m
    • 10:55 11:00
      Welcome talk 5m
      Speaker: Xinaguo Lu (Warwick)
    • 11:00 11:25
      Bartol Atmospheric Neutrino Flux Calculation: Tuning Hadronic Interactions 25m
      Speaker: Lawrence Cook (Oxford)
    • 11:25 11:50
      Neutrino interaction physics 25m
      Speaker: Abbey Waldron (Imperial)
    • 11:50 12:15
      Pandra overview 25m
      Speaker: Andrew Chappell (Warwick)
    • 12:15 12:20
      short break 5m
    • 12:20 12:45
      Atmospheric neutrino reconstruction with Pandora 25m
      Speaker: Maria Brunetti (Warwick)
    • 12:45 13:10
      T2K+SK beam and atmospheric joint fit 25m
      Speaker: Dan Barrow (Oxford)
    • 13:10 14:00
      Lunch break 50m
    • 14:00 14:20
      Atmospheric neutrino physics with Liquid Argon detectors 20m
      Speaker: Andy Blake (Lancaster)
    • 14:20 14:50
      CP-violation and the Earth's Interior Through the Atmospheric Neutrino Looking-Glass 30m
      Speaker: Yuber F Perez-Gonzalez (Durham)
    • 14:50 15:10
      JUNO discussion 20m
      Speaker: Xinaguo Lu (Warwick)
    • 15:10 15:30
      Coffee break 20m
    • 15:30 16:30
      Student quick fire talk session
      • 15:35
        Atmospheric muon measurement in DMIce 10m
        Speaker: Rogan Clark (Department of Physics)
      • 15:45
        Hyper-Kamiokande event reconstruction using machine learning technique 10m
        Speaker: Joanna Gao (Department of Physics)
      • 15:55
        The MaCh3 Oscillation Analysis Fitter 10m
        Speaker: Tom Holvey (Oxford)
      • 16:05
        Measurement of Nuclear Dependence in Inclusive Antineutrino Scattering with MINERvA 10m
        Speaker: Anežka Klustová (Imperial)
      • 16:15
        Extracting intranuclear dynamics of the argon nucleus with ProtoDUNE 10m
        Speaker: Kang Yang (Oxford)
    • 16:30 16:50
      UK high-energy astrophysical neutrino discussion 20m
      Speaker: Teppei Katori (Department of Physics)
    • 16:50 17:00
      final remark 10m
      Speaker: Xinaguo Lu (Warwick)