New Oscillation Results from the T2K experiment
hep-ex
/ Authors
/ Abstract
The T2K (Tokai to Kamioka) experiment is a second generation long baseline neutrino oscillation experiment located in Japan. The main goal is to probe the $θ_{13}$ neutrino mixing parameter by looking for $ν_μ\toν_e$ transitions in an almost pure beam of muon neutrinos. The T2K utilizes the neutirno beam produced at J-PARC (Tokai, Ibaraki) and Super-Kamiokande (Kamioka, Gifu) is used as a far detector. The experiment has been in operation since January 2010. After analyzing 1.43$\times10^{20}$ p.o.t. data collected six events are observed in far detector while the expected number with sin$^2 2θ_{13}$=0 is 1.5$\pm$0.3. Null oscillation hypotheis leads to 7$\times10^{-3}$ probability to observe six or more candidate events, which so gives 2.5 $σ$ significance to the result. Thus the current T2K result is an indication of $ν_e$ appearance due to $ν_μ\toν_e$ transitions. As for the first T2K $ν_μ$ disappearance data, the null oscillation hypothesis is exluded at 4.5 $σ$ level and the estimated atmospheric mixing parameters are consistent with the results from Super-Kamiokande and MINOS experiments.