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Effects of New Physics on Neutrino Interactions
We explore the effects of neutrino interactions due to new physics with the standard
Lorentz structure, but with the nonstandard flavor structure in the reactor electron-
antineutrino disappearance short- and medium-baseline oscillation and in the very-
short-baseline scattering experiments. In both types of experiments, we explore the
nonstandard interactions of neutrinos produced in the charged current neutron beta
decays and, later on, when detected through inverse beta decay and through purely
leptonic elastic scattering processes. In oscillation experiments, there is degeneracy
between oscillations and the new interactions, whereas the scattering experiments are
free from the degeneracy because of their baseline short enough to ignore the standard
oscillation phenomenon. In oscillation experiments, we draw on the short-baseline
Daya Bay and its future upgrade JUNO for the spectral event rate and the statistical
analyses and in the scattering experiments TEXONO and its future upgrade version
with improved statistical sensitivities for confidence level boundary regions of the
nonstandard neutrino interaction parameters. In the oscillation experiments, we find
that the average spectrum of observed events at a baseline of 50 km, in the middle of
the currently favored region, provides improvement in sensitivity to new physics if
combined with improved precision of input mixing parameters in independent
experiments, despite of the ambiguity due to the degeneracy between new physics and
oscillations in medium-baseline data. Moreover, the nonstandard interactions can
enhance or suppress the sensitivity of experiments to the mass hierarchy, depending
on the combination of nonstandard and the standard CP-violating phases. In the
scattering experiments, we confirm that the current data of TEXONO experiment
allows for new physics constraints at the detector of the same order as those currently
published. The new physics phase effects are at the 5% level, noticeable in the 90%
contour plots but not significantly affecting the conclusions. Based on the projected
statistical sensitivities with an upgraded version of TEXONO experiment, we estimate
sensitivity of new physics at both source and detector. We find that bounds on source
nonstandard interaction parameters improve by an order of magnitude, but do not
reach parameter space beyond current limits. On the other hand, the detector new
physics sensitivity would push current limits by maximum of an order of magnitude. |
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