DUNE’S LOW ENERGY PHYSICS SEARCHES
S.M. Corchado* and  On behalf of the DUNE Collaboration
*: corresponding author
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Pre-published on: December 17, 2024
Published on: April 29, 2025
Abstract
The Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment (DUNE) is a long–baseline neutrino experiment
that will precisely measure neutrino oscillation parameters, observe astrophysical neutrinos, and
search for processes beyond the Standard Model such as nucleon decays, heavy neutral leptons,
and dark matter. DUNE will build four Liquid Argon Time Projection Chambers (LAr–TPC), as
far detectors, with a total mass of ∼ 70 kt LAr located at Sanford Underground Research Facility
(SURF), 1.5 km underground. A near–site complex, hosting different detectors, will measure
the neutrino flux from an accelerated particle beam (1.2 MW) produced at the Long Baseline
Neutrino Facility (LBNF) at Fermilab, 1300 km away from SURF. Additionally, this few–MeV
low energy regime is of particular interest for detecting the burst of neutrinos from a galactic
core-collapse supernova and solar neutrinos. DUNE will measure oscillation parameters from the
solar neutrino flux analysis with much higher precision than previous experiments and discover
the yet–unobserved hep flux component.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.22323/1.476.0217
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