Author/Authors :
Sanjib Kumar Agarwalla، نويسنده , , Sandhya Choubey، نويسنده , , Amitava Raychaudhuri، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
We examine the reach of a Beta-beam experiment with two detectors at carefully chosen baselines for exploring neutrino mass parameters. Locating the source at CERN, the two detectors and baselines are: (a) a 50 kton iron calorimeter (ICAL) at a baseline of around 7150 km which is roughly the magic baseline, e.g., ICAL@INO, and (b) a 50 kton Totally Active Scintillator Detector at a distance of 730 km, e.g., at Gran Sasso. We choose 8B and 8Li source ions with a boost factor γ of 650 for the magic baseline while for the closer detector we consider 18Ne and 6He ions with a range of Lorentz boosts. We find that the locations of the two detectors complement each other leading to an exceptional high sensitivity. With image for 8B/8Li and image for 18Ne/6He and total luminosity corresponding to image and image useful ion decays in neutrino and antineutrino modes respectively, we find that the two-detector set-up can probe maximal CP violation and establish the neutrino mass ordering if image is image and image, respectively, or more. The sensitivity reach for image itself is image. With a factor of 10 higher luminosity, the corresponding image reach of this set-up would be image, image and image respectively for the above three performance indicators. CP violation can be discovered for 64% of the possible image values for image (image), for the standard luminosity (10 times enhanced luminosity). Comparable physics performance can be achieved in a set-up where data from CERN to INO@ICAL is combined with that from CERN to the Boulby mine in United Kingdom, a baseline of 1050 km.