21–26 Jun 2026
University of California, Irvine
US/Pacific timezone

Towards searches for heavy neutral leptons with the Short-Baseline Near Detector experiment

Not scheduled
20m
Conference Center (University of California, Irvine)

Conference Center

University of California, Irvine

Poster Beyond the Standard Model Poster session 2

Speaker

Jorge Romeo (CIEMAT)

Description

Heavy Neutral Leptons (HNLs) are hypothetical long-lived particles that extend the Standard Model and provide a natural explanation for the origin of neutrino masses, the generation of the baryon asymmetry through leptogenesis, and the nature of dark matter. The Short-Baseline Near Detector (SBND) is a 112-ton liquid argon time projection chamber located 110 m away from the Booster Neutrino Beam (BNB) target at Fermilab (Illinois, USA). The close location to the BNB origin makes the experiment sensitive to HNLs produced from meson decays in the beam. These heavy particles arrive at the detector later than neutrinos and decay into observable final states such as 𝜈e+e- or 𝜈π0, generating isolated electromagnetic showers. Thanks to SBND’s advanced scintillation light detection system, a timing resolution at the nanosecond level further boosts the experiment capabilities. In this poster, we present ongoing reconstruction efforts towards HNLs as well as expected sensitivities factoring in the reconstruction improvements.

Author

Jorge Romeo (CIEMAT)

Co-author

Presentation materials