• Open Access

COHERENT analysis of neutrino generalized interactions

D. Aristizabal Sierra, Valentina De Romeri, and N. Rojas
Phys. Rev. D 98, 075018 – Published 22 October 2018

Abstract

Effective neutrino-quark generalized interactions are entirely determined by Lorentz invariance, so they include all possible four-fermion nonderivative Lorentz structures. They contain neutrino-quark nonstandard interactions as a subset, but span over a larger set that involves effective scalar, pseudoscalar, axial and tensor operators. Using recent COHERENT data, we derive constraints on the corresponding couplings by considering scalar, vector and tensor quark currents and assuming no lepton flavor dependence. We allow for mixed neutrino-quark Lorentz couplings and consider two types of scenarios in which: (i) one interaction at the nuclear level is present at a time, (ii) two interactions are simultaneously present. For scenarios (i) our findings show that scalar interactions are the most severely constrained, in particular for pseudoscalar-scalar neutrino-quark couplings. In contrast, tensor and nonstandard vector interactions still enable for sizable effective parameters. We find as well that an extra vector interaction improves the data fit when compared with the result derived assuming only the standard model contribution. In scenarios (ii) the presence of two interactions relaxes the bounds and opens regions in parameter space that are otherwise closed, with the effect being more pronounced in the scalar-vector and scalar-tensor cases. We point out that barring the vector case, our results represent the most stringent bounds on effective neutrino-quark generalized interactions for mediator masses of order 1GeV. They hold as well for larger mediator masses, case in which they should be compared with limits from neutrino deep-inelastic scattering data.

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  • Received 8 September 2018

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.98.075018

Published by the American Physical Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license. Further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the published article’s title, journal citation, and DOI. Funded by SCOAP3.

Published by the American Physical Society

Physics Subject Headings (PhySH)

Particles & Fields

Authors & Affiliations

D. Aristizabal Sierra1,2,*, Valentina De Romeri3,†, and N. Rojas1,‡

  • 1Universidad Técnica Federico Santa María-Departamento de Física Casilla 110-V, Avenida España 1680, Valparaíso, Chile
  • 2IFPA, Départment AGO, Université de Liège, Bât B5, Sart Tilman B-4000 Liège 1, Belgium
  • 3AHEP Group, Instituto de Física Corpuscular, CSIC/Universitat de València, Calle Catedrático José Beltrán, 2 E-46980 Paterna, Spain

  • *daristizabal@ulg.ac.be
  • deromeri@ific.uv.es
  • nicolas.rojasro@usm.cl

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Issue

Vol. 98, Iss. 7 — 1 October 2018

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