Kamioka Liquid Scintillator Antineutrino Detector
The Kamioka Liquid Scintillator Antineutrino Detector is an electron antineutrino detector at the Kamioka Observatory, an underground neutrino detection facility in Hida, Gifu, Japan. The device is situated in a drift mine shaft in the old KamiokaNDE cavity in the Japanese Alps. The site is surrounded by 53 Japanese commercial nuclear reactors. Nuclear reactors produce electron antineutrinos during the decay of radioactive fission products in the nuclear fuel. Like the intensity of light from a light bulb or a distant star, the isotropically-emitted flux decreases at 1/R2 per increasing distance R from the reactor. The device is sensitive up to an estimated 25% of antineutrinos from nuclear reactors that exceed the threshold energy of 1.8 megaelectronvolts and thus produces a signal in the detector.
If neutrinos have mass, they may oscillate into flavors that an experiment may not detect, leading to a further dimming, or "disappearance," of the electron antineutrinos. KamLAND is located at an average flux-weighted distance of approximately 180 kilometers from the reactors, which makes it sensitive to the mixing of neutrinos associated with large mixing angle solutions to the solar neutrino problem.
KamLAND Detector
The KamLAND detector's outer layer consists of an 18 meter-diameter stainless steel containment vessel with an inner lining of 1,879 photo-multiplier tubes. Photocathode coverage is 34%. Its second, inner layer consists of a -diameter nylon balloon filled with a liquid scintillator composed of 1,000 metric tons of mineral oil, benzene, and fluorescent chemicals. Non-scintillating, highly purified oil provides buoyancy for the balloon and acts as a buffer to keep the balloon away from the photo-multiplier tubes; the oil also shields against external radiation. A 3.2 kiloton cylindrical water Cherenkov detector surrounds the containment vessel, acting as a muon veto counter and providing shielding from cosmic rays and radioactivity from the surrounding rock.Electron antineutrinos are detected through the Inverse beta decay reaction, which has a 1.8 MeV energy threshold. The prompt scintillation light from the positron gives an estimate of the incident antineutrino energy,, where is the prompt event energy including the positron kinetic energy and the annihilation energy. The quantity <> is the average neutron recoil energy, which is only a few tens of kiloelectronvolts. The neutron is captured on hydrogen approximately 200 microseconds later, emitting a characteristic ray. This delayed-coincidence signature is a very powerful tool for distinguishing antineutrinos from backgrounds produced by other particles.
To compensate for the loss in flux due to the long baseline, KamLAND has a much larger detection volume compared to earlier devices. The KamLAND detector uses a 1,000-metric-ton detection mass, which is over twice the size of similar detectors, such as Borexino. However, the increased volume of the detector also demands more shielding from cosmic rays, requiring the detector be placed underground.
As part of the Kamland-Zen double beta decay search, a balloon of scintillator with 320 kg of dissolved xenon was suspended in the center of the detector in 2011. A cleaner rebuilt balloon is planned with additional xenon. KamLAND-PICO is a planned project that will install the PICO-LON detector in KamLand to search for dark matter. PICO-LON is a radiopure NaI crystal that observes inelastic WIMP-nucleus scattering. Improvements to the detector are planned, adding light collecting mirrors and PMTs with higher quantum efficiency.
Results
Neutrino oscillation
KamLAND started to collect data on January 17, 2002. First results were reported using only 145 days of data. Without neutrino oscillation, events were expected, however, only 54 events were observed. KamLAND confirmed this result with a 515-day data sample, 365.2 events were predicted in the absence of oscillation, and 258 events were observed. These results established antineutrino disappearance at high significance.The KamLAND detector not only counts the antineutrino rate, but also measures their energy. The shape of this energy spectrum carries additional information that can be used to investigate neutrino oscillation hypotheses. Statistical analyses in 2005 show the spectrum distortion is inconsistent with the no-oscillation hypothesis and two alternative disappearance mechanisms, namely the neutrino decay and de-coherence models. It is consistent with 2-neutrino oscillation and a fit provides the values for the Δm2 and θ parameters. Since KamLAND measures Δm2 most precisely and the solar experiments exceed KamLAND's ability to measure θ, the most precise oscillation parameters are obtained in combination with solar results. Such a combined fit gives and , the best neutrino oscillation parameter determination to that date. Since then a 3 neutrino model has been used.
Precision combined measurements were reported in 2008 and 2011:
Geological antineutrinos (geoneutrinos)
KamLAND also published an investigation of geologically-produced antineutrinos in 2005. These neutrinos are produced in the decay of thorium and uranium in the Earth's crust and mantle. A few geoneutrinos were detected and these limited data were used to limit the U/Th radiopower to under 60TW.Combination results with Borexino were published in 2011, measuring the U/Th heat flux.
New results in 2013, benefiting from the reduced backgrounds due to Japanese reactor shutdowns, were able to constrain U/Th radiogenic heat production to TW using 116 events. This constrains composition models of the bulk silicate Earth and agrees with the reference Earth model.
KamLAND-Zen Double Beta Decay Search
KamLAND-Zen uses the detector to study beta decay of 136Xe from a balloon placed in the scintillator in summer 2011. Observations set a limit for neutrinoless double-beta decay half-life of. A double beta decay lifetime was also measured: yr, consistent with other xenon studies. KamLAND-Zen plans continued observations with more enriched Xe and improved detector components.An improved search was published in August 2016, increasing the half-life limit to, with a neutrino mass bound of 61–165 meV.
The first KamLAND-Zen apparatus, KamLAND-Zen 400, has as of 2018 completed two research programs, Phase I and Phase II. The combined data of Phase I and II implied the lower bound years for the neutrinoless double beta decay half-life.
The second KamLAND-Zen experiment apparatus, KamLAND-Zen 800, with bigger balloon of about 750kg of Xenon was installed in the KamLAND detector 10 May 2018. The operation is expected to start winter 2018-2019 with 5 years of expected operation.
The KamLAND-Zen collaboration is planning to construct another apparatus, KamLAND2-Zen in the long term.