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Proceeding Paper

Analysis of T2K and MINERνA Semi-Inclusive νμ12C Measurements †

1
Departamento de Física Atómica, Molecular y Nuclear, Universidad de Sevilla, 41080 Sevilla, Spain
2
Dipartimento di Fisica, Università di Torino, Via P. Giuria 1, 10125 Torino, Italy
3
Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare (INFN), Sezione di Torino, 10125 Torino, Italy
4
Grupo de Física Nuclear, Departamento de Estructura de la Materia, Física Térmica y Electrónica and IPARCOS, Facultad de Ciencias Físicas, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, CEI Moncloa, 28040 Madrid, Spain
5
European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN), 1211 Geneva, Switzerland
6
Instituto de Física Teórica y Computacional Carlos I, 18071 Granada, Spain
7
Research Center for Cosmic Neutrinos, Institute for Cosmic Ray Research, University of Tokyo, Kashiwa, Chiba 277-8582, Japan
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Presented at the 23rd International Workshop on Neutrinos from Accelerators, Salt Lake City, UT, USA, 30–31 July 2022.
Phys. Sci. Forum 2023, 8(1), 43; https://doi.org/10.3390/psf2023008043
Published: 22 August 2023

Abstract

:
We compare the semi-inclusive ν μ 12 C cross-section measurements via T2K and MINER ν A collaborations with the predictions from the SuSAv2-MEC model implemented in the neutrino event generator GENIE and an unfactorized approach based on the relativistic distorted wave impulse approximation (RDWIA). Results, which include cross-sections as a function of the final muon and proton kinematics as well as correlations between both, show that the agreement with data obtained via the RDWIA approach—which accounts for final-state interactions—matches or improves GENIE-SuSAv2 predictions for very forward angles, where scaling violations are relevant.

1. Introduction

Lately, there has been a growing interest in the measurements of more exclusive neutrino–nucleus reactions, for instance, the detection in the coincidence of a muon and an ejected proton in the final state, which are more sensitive to nuclear medium effects than inclusive measurements, where only the final lepton is detected. Such reactions, where both a lepton and another particle are detected in coincidence, are often referred as semi-inclusive reactions. Because an extra particle is detected alongside the lepton, these reactions do not fall under the category of inclusive, nor can they be classified as exclusive. This is due to the unknown energy transfer to the nucleus by the neutrino, leading to uncertainty about the state of the residual nucleus. In the past, an unfactorized relativistic and fully quantum approach based on the relativistic distorted-wave impulse approximation (RDWIA) [1] successfully described exclusive e , e p cross-section measurements using a relativistic optical potential (ROP) to model the final state interactions (FSIs) between the ejected proton and the residual nucleus. In contrast with the microscopic and unfactorized models like RDWIA, which incorporate in the modeling both the lepton–boson and the boson–nucleus vertex in some detail, and thus can be compared to semi-inclusive observables, there are other models, like the SuSAv2 model [2,3], that are aimed to describe inclusive cross-sections, that is, only as function of the final lepton kinematics, and thus cannot make predictions on both leptons and hadrons in the final state. In spite of this, by taking advantage of a factorization approach, some neutrino event generators like GENIE [4] can make predictions about the lepton and also the outgoing nucleon kinematics from these inclusive models [5]. This factorization implies that the initial nuclear state, which is generated from a local Fermi gas distribution, is decoupled from the leptonic vertex. This way, while the behavior of the cross-section against the muon kinematics may be described correctly, there is no guarantee whatsoever that the correlations between the final muons and protons for a given event are preserved. Moreover, this approach could present inconsistent results when the nuclear model used to generate the outgoing nucleon is different from the nuclear model used in the inclusive cross-section, as is the case in the current SuSAv2 implementation in GENIE [5]. Furthermore, the results from this approach rely strongly on the semi-classical description of FSIs commonly used in neutrino event generators [6,7], which have been shown to be unable to produce microscopic FSI predictions at low outgoing nucleon momenta [8].
In this manuscript, we will compare T2K [9] and MINER ν A [10,11] ν μ 12 C semi-inclusive CC0 π cross-section measurements with one muon and at least one proton in the final state (denoted CC0 π Np) with results obtained from the RDWIA using a ROP fitted to elastic proton–nucleus scattering data and a modified version of the relativistic mean field (RMF) potential [12,13] parameterized to reproduce properties of nuclei. To this comparison, we will also add the calculation without FSIs, using the relativistic plane-wave impulse approximation (RPWIA), to show the importance of this nuclear effect for the description of semi-inclusive results, and the estimations from the inclusive SuSAv2-MEC model implemented in the GENIE event generator [5] to test the validity of the approximations made by the event generators to obtain hadron kinematics, using as the starting point such an inclusive model. To all these quasielastic contributions, we will add the SuSAv2-2p2h meson exchange current (MEC) [14,15,16] and pion absorption contributions calculated with GENIE for a full comparison with the available cross-section measurements.

2. Semi-Inclusive Neutrino–Nucleus Reactions within the RDWIA

The kinematics of the outgoing lepton k and nucleon p N for semi-inclusive CC 0 π events is characterized by a set of six independent variables k , θ l , ϕ l , p N , θ N L , ϕ N L defined in the laboratory frame with the target nucleus A at rest and the neutrino direction fixed in the z-axis. We consider that the incoming neutrinos are distributed according to an energy distribution or flux Φ ( k ) and that the impulse approximation (IA) is valid. Then, the flux-averaged semi-inclusive neutrino–nucleus cross-section is [8,13]
d σ d k d Ω k d p N d Ω N L = G F 2 cos 2 θ c k 2 p N 2 64 π 5 d k W B E B f rec L μ ν H μ ν Φ ( k ) ,
where Ω k and Ω N L are, respectively, the solid angles of the final lepton and the ejected proton; the residual nucleus B can be left in an excited state with invariant mass W B and total energy E B ; L μ ν and H μ ν are the leptonic and hadronic tensors; and f rec is the recoil factor. Taking into account that we will describe the initial nuclear state as a product of RMF single-particle states labeled with a quantum number κ , we introduce the hadron tensor for each shell κ , given by
H κ μ ν = ρ κ E m m j , s N J κ , m j , s N μ J κ , m j , s N ν *
where ρ κ E m is the missing energy density and J κ , m j , s N μ is the hadronic current that depends on the initial and final nucleons wave functions Ψ s N and Φ κ m j , and the one-body current operator [17]. The parameterization of missing energy density ρ κ ( E m ) for 12 C used in this work is equivalent to the one used in [13] for 16 O. By using this method, we can include effects caused by long- and short-range correlations as seen in the spectral function formalism but without imposing factorization of the cross-section. The parameters in the ρ κ ( E m ) function for 12 C were fitted to reproduce the missing energy profile that one obtains from the Rome spectral function for 12 C [18,19]. The different FSI prescriptions are associated to the different ways of calculating Ψ s N p N , r , all of them within a fully relativistic and quantum framework.
Energy-dependent RMF (ED-RMF): For this model, the nucleon ejected in the final state is represented by a scattering solution of the Dirac equation with the same RMF potential used to describe the initial nucleus but multiplied by a phenomenological function that weakens the potential for increasing nucleon momenta [12].
Relativistic Optical Potential (ROP): The ejected nucleon moves across the residual hadronic system under the influence of a phenomenological relativistic optical potential fitted to reproduce elastic proton–nucleus scattering data [20] in the context of the optical model. This potential contains a real and an imaginary term, where the latter accounts for loses to inelastic channels.
Relativistic Plane-Wave IA (RPWIA): The ejected nucleon is described by a relativistic plane wave. Therefore, in this case, FSIs are neglected. We include this model in our study to assess the importance of FSIs in the description of semi-inclusive processes.

3. Results

We now proceed to compare all the available semi-inclusive CC0 π Np cross-section measurements for T2K and MINER ν A with the predictions of two approaches for the 1p1h sector: the RMF model based on Equation (1), where FSIs are implemented using the different prescriptions described in Section 2, and the 1p1h GENIE-SuSAv2 implementation described in [5]. For both approaches, we add on top of the SuSAv2-2p2h MEC [14,21] and pion absorption [22] contributions calculated with GENIE. The processing of the GENIE output and its comparison to experimental data was made using the NUISANCE framework [23]. For both T2K and MINER ν A, the comparison is made as function of muon and proton kinematics, as well as a function of the transverse kinematic imbalances (TKI) [24] that measure correlations between the final muon and proton in the plane transverse to the neutrino direction.
In Figure 1, the semi-inclusive cross-sections predicted by ROP as a function of the muon and proton kinematics for MINER ν A seem qualitatively in reasonable agreement with the theoretical predictions, except for the θ N L cross-section, where there is an underestimation of the cross-section measurements for low values of θ N L and an overestimation in the high- θ N L region. Whilst all models other than ROP overpredict the cross-section, agreement between the ED-RMF and the GENIE-SuSAv2 predictions is very good except for the p N distribution, where differences can be seen in the whole interval of the proton momentum. It should be noted that the apparent overprediction of the non-ROP models may be due to a mismodeling of the strength of the 2p2h or pion absorption contributions and may therefore not suggest an issue in the CCQE modeling.
In Figure 1, we also compare the microscopic calculations and the GENIE implementation of SuSAv2 with T2K CC0 π cross-section measurements without protons in the final state with momenta above 0.5 GeV (CC0 π 0p) as a function of the final muon kinematics (top-right panels) and the semi-inclusive CC0 π Np cross-section measurements with protons in the final state with momenta above 0.5 GeV as a function of the final proton kinematics (bottom-right panels). For the CC0 π 0p results and backward muon angles, the microscopic calculation predicts a rather small difference between the results for RPWIA and the models with FSIs (ROP and ED-RMF), all of them underestimating the experimental measurements in contrast with the better agreement achieved with GENIE- SuSAv2. As we move to more forward angles, GENIE-SuSAv2 predictions start to overestimate some of the experimental points, an outcome probably due to the scaling/factorization violations and poor treatment of low-energy effects, which are accounted for more consistently in ED-RMF. The CC0 π Np results shown in Figure 1 are more affected by non-quasielastic contributions than the CC0 π 0p measurements and the GENIE-SuSAv2 results slightly overestimate some of the experimental points, while the ED-RMF and ROP models tend to match or improve the agreement with the measurements.
Finally, in Figure 2, we show the predictions of the different models as a function of TKI compared with T2K and MINER ν A measurements. The δ p T distribution favors the ED-RMF calculation over the GENIE-SuSAv2 predictions in the low δ p T region for T2K, which is mainly dominated by initial-state effects with negligible contribution from the 2p2h and pion absorption channels. This could be caused by the inconsistencies of the implementation of the SuSAv2 model, which is based on the RMF theory, in GENIE, that generates the initial state nucleon using a local Fermi gas model. Above the Fermi level, all the microscopic models except for ROP overestimate T2K δ p T measurements after including the 2p2h and pion absorption contributions. Regarding the MINER ν A δ p T measurements, all the models except for ROP overestimate the data in the peak of the distribution even without adding the non-quasielastic contributions. In the high-momentum imbalance tail, the contribution from non-quasielastic channels is sufficient and necessary to match the experimental results. Concerning the δ α T distributions, it is interesting to point out the appearance of a clear peak at large δ α T values in the MINER ν A cross-section measurements that is not present in the T2K experimental results, which might be caused by additional non-quasielastic contributions present in MINER ν A but not in T2K due to the higher energy of the neutrinos. The GENIE-SuSAv2 predictions and all the microscopic results except for the ROP overestimate the cross-section measurements, although the shape of the rise in δ α T for MINER ν A seems to be well described by the combination of FSIs and non-quasielastic contributions and the overestimation is less significant using ED-RMF compared with GENIE-SuSAv2 results. Lastly, all the model predictions except for ROP as a function of δ ϕ T shown in Figure 2 overestimate the cross-section measurements, although the overestimation is less severe in the case of the ED-RMF model for low values of δ ϕ T .

4. Conclusions

We have compared the treatment of semi-inclusive neutrino–nucleus reactions within an unfactorized relativistic approach with the GENIE implementation of the SuSAv2-MEC model and some of the latest T2K and MINER ν A cross-section measurements. Although it is difficult to draw precise conclusions about the individual effects of the approximations used to obtain semi-inclusive results with the SuSAv2 model, the microscopic calculation using a modified RMF potential (ED-RMF) improves the agreement with the experimental results at forward angles where scaling violations and low-energy effects not included in the SuSAv2 model are relevant. For the cross-sections as a function of the TKI, the best agreement with the experimental data is given by the RDWIA predictions, especially the MINER ν A measurements, where ROP is the only model that does not overestimate the data.

Author Contributions

Writing—original draft preparation, J.M.F.-P.; writing—review and editing, R.G.-J., S.D., M.B.B., J.A.C., G.D.M. and J.M.U.; visualization, J.M.F.-P. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research was funded by the projects PID2020-114687GB-100; PID2021-127098NA-I00 funded by MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033/FEDER, UE; PR65/19-22430 funded by the government of Madrid and Complutense University; FQM160, SOMM17/61015/UGR and P20-01247 funded by Junta de Andalucía. It is supported in part by the University of Tokyo ICRR’s Inter-University Resarch Program FY2021 & FY2022; by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant agreement No. 839481; by the University of Turin, project BARM-RILO-21; and by INFN, national project NUCSYS. J.M. Franco-Patino acknowledges support from a fellowship from the Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades, Program FPI (Spain).

Institutional Review Board Statement

Not applicable.

Informed Consent Statement

Not applicable.

Data Availability Statement

Not applicable.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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Figure 1. MINER ν A [10,11] (left) and T2K [9] (right) CC0 π semi-inclusive ν μ 12 C cross sections as a function of the muon (top) and proton (bottom) kinematics. All curves include the 2p2h and pion absorption contributions (also shown separately), evaluated using GENIE. T2K results as a function of the muon kinematics correspond to p N < 0.5 GeV, while the results as a function of the proton kinematics correspond to p N > 0.5 GeV.
Figure 1. MINER ν A [10,11] (left) and T2K [9] (right) CC0 π semi-inclusive ν μ 12 C cross sections as a function of the muon (top) and proton (bottom) kinematics. All curves include the 2p2h and pion absorption contributions (also shown separately), evaluated using GENIE. T2K results as a function of the muon kinematics correspond to p N < 0.5 GeV, while the results as a function of the proton kinematics correspond to p N > 0.5 GeV.
Psf 08 00043 g001
Figure 2. MINER ν A [10,11] (top) and T2K [9] (bottom) CC0 π semi-inclusive ν μ 12 C cross-sections as a function of the transverse kinematic imbalances δ p T , δ α T and δ ϕ T . All curves include the 2p2h and pion absorption contributions (also shown separately), evaluated using GENIE.
Figure 2. MINER ν A [10,11] (top) and T2K [9] (bottom) CC0 π semi-inclusive ν μ 12 C cross-sections as a function of the transverse kinematic imbalances δ p T , δ α T and δ ϕ T . All curves include the 2p2h and pion absorption contributions (also shown separately), evaluated using GENIE.
Psf 08 00043 g002
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MDPI and ACS Style

Franco-Patino, J.M.; González-Jiménez, R.; Dolan, S.; Barbaro, M.B.; Caballero, J.A.; Megias, G.D.; Udias, J.M. Analysis of T2K and MINERνA Semi-Inclusive νμ12C Measurements. Phys. Sci. Forum 2023, 8, 43. https://doi.org/10.3390/psf2023008043

AMA Style

Franco-Patino JM, González-Jiménez R, Dolan S, Barbaro MB, Caballero JA, Megias GD, Udias JM. Analysis of T2K and MINERνA Semi-Inclusive νμ12C Measurements. Physical Sciences Forum. 2023; 8(1):43. https://doi.org/10.3390/psf2023008043

Chicago/Turabian Style

Franco-Patino, J. M., R. González-Jiménez, S. Dolan, M. B. Barbaro, J. A. Caballero, G. D. Megias, and J. M. Udias. 2023. "Analysis of T2K and MINERνA Semi-Inclusive νμ12C Measurements" Physical Sciences Forum 8, no. 1: 43. https://doi.org/10.3390/psf2023008043

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