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      Measurement of the neutron lifetime using a magneto-gravitational trap

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          Abstract

          Precision measurements of the free neutron lifetime \(\tau_n\), when combined with measurements of the axial vector form factor, can be used to test unitarity of the CKM matrix. Non-unitarity is a signal for physics Beyond the Standard Model (BSM). Sensitivity to BSM physics requires measurements of \(\tau_n\) to a precision of 0.1~s. However, the two dominant techniques to measure \(\tau_n\) (colloquially beam and bottle measurements) disagree by nearly 10~s. UCN\(\tau\) is a neutron lifetime experiment using a magneto-gravitational trap and an in-situ neutron detector. Neutrons in this trap are not susceptible to loss on material walls as in previous bottle measurements. Additionally, the in-situ detector allows spectral monitoring of the trapped Ultracold Neutrons. In this talk, I will present our most recent result - \(\tau_n=877.7\pm0.7_\text{(stat.)}+0.4/-0.2_\text{(sys.)}\)~s. I will also present Monte Carlo simulations of systematic effects in the experiment including heating and spectral cleaning.

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          The neutron and its role in cosmology and particle physics

          Experiments with cold and ultracold neutrons have reached a level of precision such that problems far beyond the scale of the present Standard Model of particle physics become accessible to experimental investigation. Due to the close links between particle physics and cosmology, these studies also permit a deep look into the very first instances of our universe. First addressed in this article, both in theory and experiment, is the problem of baryogenesis ... The question how baryogenesis could have happened is open to experimental tests, and it turns out that this problem can be curbed by the very stringent limits on an electric dipole moment of the neutron, a quantity that also has deep implications for particle physics. Then we discuss the recent spectacular observation of neutron quantization in the earth's gravitational field and of resonance transitions between such gravitational energy states. These measurements, together with new evaluations of neutron scattering data, set new constraints on deviations from Newton's gravitational law at the picometer scale. Such deviations are predicted in modern theories with extra-dimensions that propose unification of the Planck scale with the scale of the Standard Model ... Another main topic is the weak-interaction parameters in various fields of physics and astrophysics that must all be derived from measured neutron decay data. Up to now, about 10 different neutron decay observables have been measured, much more than needed in the electroweak Standard Model. This allows various precise tests for new physics beyond the Standard Model, competing with or surpassing similar tests at high-energy. The review ends with a discussion of neutron and nuclear data required in the synthesis of the elements during the "first three minutes" and later on in stellar nucleosynthesis.
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            The evaluation ofVudand its impact on the unitarity of the Cabibbo–Kobayashi–Maskawa quark-mixing matrix

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              Beta Decays and Non-Standard Interactions in the LHC Era

              We consider the role of precision measurements of beta decays and light meson semi-leptonic decays in probing physics beyond the Standard Model in the LHC era. We describe all low-energy charged-current processes within and beyond the Standard Model using an effective field theory framework. We first discuss the theoretical hadronic input which in these precision tests plays a crucial role in setting the baseline for new physics searches. We then review the current and upcoming constraints on the various non-standard operators from the study of decay rates, spectra, and correlations in a broad array of light-quark systems. We finally discuss the interplay with LHC searches, both within models and in an effective theory approach. Our discussion illustrates the independent yet complementary nature of precision beta decay measurements as probes of new physics, showing them to be of continuing importance throughout the LHC era.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                01 October 2018
                Article
                1810.00958
                16a94fdc-5eee-44af-ae52-6df663896e10

                http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

                History
                Custom metadata
                CIPANP2018-Callahan
                Talk presented CIPANP2018. 6 pages, 1 figure, LaTeX
                nucl-ex physics.ins-det

                Technical & Applied physics,Nuclear physics
                Technical & Applied physics, Nuclear physics

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