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 | 2 | \section{Monte Carlo Generators}
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 | 3 | 
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 | 4 | 
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 | 5 | 
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 | 6 |  Accurate measurements of neutrino oscillation parameters by future experiments could be significantly hampered 
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 | 7 | 
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 | 8 | by the large uncertainties in neutrino cross-section in the sub-GeV range. Neutrino interactions with nucleon in
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 | 9 | 
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 | 10 | nuclei are not well understood from a theoretical point of view, especially at low energies, and experimental 
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 | 11 | 
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 | 12 | data are sparse. Futhermore, most of available data come from Bubble chamber experiments made in the late 70s and have 
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 | 13 | 
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 | 14 | large systematic errors induced by the determination of the neutrino flux. Calulations for charged current $\nu_\mu$ are 
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 | 15 | 
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 | 16 | shown in Fig \ref{fig:neutrinoxsection}. \\
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 | 17 | 
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 | 18 | 
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 | 19 | 
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 | 20 |  New generation of high intensity and well controlled neutrino beams allow to collect much precised data that will 
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 | 21 | 
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 | 22 | attend to futher understand interactions and better constrain models.\\
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 | 23 | 
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 | 24 | 
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 | 25 | 
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 | 26 | \begin{figure}[hbt]
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 | 27 | 
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 | 28 | \begin{center}
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 | 29 | 
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 | 30 | \vspace{0.1cm}
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 | 31 | 
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 | 32 | \includegraphics[width=85mm]{./figures/neutrinoXsection.epsf}
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 | 33 | 
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 | 34 | \vspace{0.5cm}
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 | 35 | 
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 | 36 | \caption{ $\nu_\mu$ charged current cross-section calculations compared with experimental data}
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 | 37 | 
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 | 38 | \label{fig:neutrinoxsection}
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 | 39 | 
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 | 40 | \end{center}
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 | 41 | 
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 | 42 | \end{figure}
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 | 43 | 
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 | 44 | 
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 | 45 | 
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 | 46 |  Many Monte-carlo generator codes exist but are optimised for a dedicated experiment, ${\it{e.g.}}$ tuned for specific 
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 | 47 | 
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 | 48 | target materials. The GENIE collaboration\footnote{http://hepunx.rl.ac.uk/~candreop/generators/GENIE/} \cite{genie} gathers 
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 | 49 | 
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 | 50 | experimentalists from major neutrino experiments as well as theorits and proposes a Universal neutrino generator 
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 | 51 | 
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 | 52 | that will work for all nuclear targets in all energies. 
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 | 53 | 
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 | 54 | The code of the framework is developped in Object-Oriented language to ease the interface with standard libraries like 
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 | 55 | 
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 | 56 | the CERNLIB or CLHEP packages, with other existing simulation softwares (Geant4, Pythia7, $\ldots$) and with standard 
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 | 57 | 
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 | 58 | analysis tools such as ROOT.\\ 
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 | 59 | 
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 | 60 |  An additional feature that is included in the GENIE framework is an interface with a database containing the 
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 | 61 | 
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 | 62 | world's neutrino data \cite{xsectiondata} for model validation.\\
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 | 63 | 
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 | 64 |  
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 | 65 | 
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 | 66 | \section{Background rejection in large water Cerenkov}
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 | 67 | 
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 | 68 | 
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 | 69 | 
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 | 70 |  Large underground water Cherenkov detectors can measure $\nu_{\rm{e}}$ appearance as well as $\nu_\mu$
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 | 71 | 
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 | 72 | disappearance. Projects have different configurations in neutrino flux and energy spectrum, although with 
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 | 73 | 
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 | 74 | a similar overall shape with a the dip from oscillation minimum in the oscillated $\nu_\mu$ distribution.
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 | 75 | 
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 | 76 | 
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 | 77 | 
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 | 78 | \par 
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 | 79 | 
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 | 80 |  For a $\nu_\mu$ disapearance experiment, the signal is muons from charged current quasi elestic interactions,
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 | 81 | 
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 | 82 | $\nu_\mu + n \rightarrow p + \mu^-$.
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 | 83 | 
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 | 84 | 
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 | 85 | 
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 | 86 | \par
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 | 87 | 
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 | 88 |  For a $\nu_{\rm{e}}$ appearance experiment, the signal comes from oscillated $\nu_{\rm{e}}$ neutrinos, 
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 | 89 | 
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 | 90 | $\nu_\mu \rightarrow \nu_{\rm{e}}$, $\nu_{\rm{e}} + n \rightarrow p + e^-$ and is detected as a fully 
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 | 91 | 
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 | 92 | contained single electron-ring event.\\
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 | 93 | 
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 | 94 | 
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 | 95 | 
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 | 96 | \par
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 | 97 | 
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 | 98 |  Realistic monte-carlo studies for background rejection in $\nu_{\rm{e}}$ appearance experiments are 
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 | 99 | 
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 | 100 | the essential groundwork for the quest for the last unknown mixing angle of the mixing matrix and 
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 | 101 | 
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 | 102 | precise measurement of $\theta_{13}$. Main background sources are the $\nu_{\rm{e}}$ contamination in 
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 | 103 | 
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 | 104 | the beam and neutral current events with one pion decaying into two photons, $\nu + N \rightarrow N' + \nu + \pi^0 (\gamma\gamma)$. 
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 | 105 | 
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 | 106 | The latter can be reduced by the reconstruction of the second fainter photon-ring. Indeed, it is likely that 
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 | 107 | 
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 | 108 | one of the photon will carry away most of the energy, and when the energy fraction of one photon is very small, 
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 | 109 | 
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 | 110 | the event closely resembles electron signal. Algorthims for $\pi^0$ identification have thus been developped 
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 | 111 | 
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 | 112 | both at T2K \cite{dunmore} and at a megaton class detector on a Very Long Base Line neutrino beam \cite{yanagisawa}. 
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 | 113 | 
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 | 114 | Background can be subtracted for values of $\theta_{13}$ at the CHOOZ limit, understanding of systematic uncertainties becomes yet crucial 
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 | 115 | 
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 | 116 | as $\theta_{13}$ gets smaller. \\
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 | 117 | 
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 | 118 | 
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 | 119 | 
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 | 120 |  Estimated performances can be further improved with a better energy reconstruction for all charged 
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 | 121 | 
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 | 122 | current events.
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 | 123 | 
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 | 124 | 
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 | 125 | 
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 | 126 | 
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 | 127 | 
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 | 128 | 
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 | 129 | 
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 | 130 | \section{Photodetection}
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 | 131 | 
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 | 132 | 
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 | 133 | 
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 | 134 | The remarkable successes of SuperK, Kamland, and SNO experiments have triggered
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 | 135 | 
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 | 136 | future extrapolated projects aiming the improvement on the accuracy of the
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 | 137 | 
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 | 138 | actual neutrinos family parameters, the exploration of the other ones as well as
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 | 139 | 
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 | 140 | the search for proton lifetime; sensitive volumes should reach the megaton
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 | 141 | 
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 | 142 | scale,
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 | 143 | 
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 | 144 | which is an extrapolation by a factor 10-20 of the SK size. In the same
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 | 145 | 
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 | 146 | inflatory direction, the detection of very high energy cosmic neutrinos in ice
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 | 147 | 
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 | 148 | or water Cerenkov-based detectors will also lead to large numbers of
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 | 149 | 
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 | 150 | photomultipliers. It exists then a strong motivation for R\&D trying to decrease
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 | 151 | 
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 | 152 | the price of photo-sensitive $cm^2$, which is a major component of projects
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 | 153 | 
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 | 154 | budgets. Note that for the calculation of these  "surface unit prices", HV,
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 | 155 | 
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 | 156 | front-end electronics and cables have of course to be included.
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 | 157 | 
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 | 158 | 
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 | 159 | 
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 | 160 |   In another hand, the use of Cerenkov light requires conflicting qualities
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 | 161 | 
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 | 162 |   concerning the single photoelectron sensitivity, the fast time response
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 | 163 | 
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 | 164 |   needed for a good vertex determination, the best photodetection efficiency for
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 | 165 | 
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 | 166 |   setting lower energy thresholds and a robust water pressure resistant
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 | 167 | 
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 | 168 |   envelop able to work at 10 atmospheres pressure without fatal implosion. The
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 | 169 | 
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 | 170 |   process of fabrication should also take account of the time needed to built
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 | 171 | 
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 | 172 |   large quantities ( scale: 100000 u). Clearly common R\&D with industry are
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 | 173 | 
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 | 174 |   needed.
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 | 175 | 
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 | 176 |   
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 | 177 | 
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 | 178 |   Price lowering can follow one or several recepices:
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 | 179 | 
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 | 180 | \begin{itemize}
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 | 181 | 
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 | 182 | \item
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 | 183 | 
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 | 184 | Remove the glass blowing (\cite{ferenc})
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 | 185 | 
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 | 186 | 
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 | 187 | 
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 | 188 | This leads to a very elegant development using sealed glass planes (\cite{ferenc})
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 | 189 | 
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 | 190 | \item  
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 | 191 | 
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 | 192 | Simplify the electron multiplicative element (\cite{ferenc},\cite{sk},\cite{photonis})
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 | 193 | 
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 | 194 | 
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 | 195 | 
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 | 196 |  The basic idea is to accelerate photoelectrons from photocathode with a large
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 | 197 | 
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 | 198 |  potential (10-20 KV); for shaped field, it exists a small surface of
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 | 199 | 
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 | 200 |  convergence where can be placed either scintillator+small pm (\cite{photonis}),
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 | 201 | 
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 | 202 |  or an APD ( \cite{sk}). The total gain is then the product of the acceleration gain (
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 | 203 | 
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 | 204 |  $\sim$ 4500) followed by the detecting device gain ( $\sim$ 30 or more for an APD).
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 | 205 | 
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 | 206 |  Such system disposes of a  fast time response even for large size photocathods 
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 | 207 | 
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 | 208 |  and of an impressive single
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 | 209 | 
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 | 210 |  p.e performance. The main drawbacks are  the problems brought with the isolation of
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 | 211 | 
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 | 212 |  the very high voltage and a
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 | 213 | 
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 | 214 |  frontend fast amplification needed for the APD case.
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 | 215 | 
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 | 216 | \item 
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 | 217 | 
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 | 218 | Optimize the unit size (\cite{photonis})
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 | 219 | 
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 | 220 | 
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 | 221 | 
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 | 222 | For classical big pmts, there is a not obvious relation between size, price/$cm^2$
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 | 223 | 
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 | 224 | ,time performance, total efficiency and investments for production tools.
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 | 225 | 
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 | 226 | Photonis (\cite{photonis}) evaluated this and found as the best candidate a 12
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 | 227 | 
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 | 228 | inches tube, compared to bigger ones. 
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 | 229 | 
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 | 230 | \item
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 | 231 | 
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 | 232 | Increase the photocathode efficiencies (\cite{ferenc},\cite{photonis})
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 | 233 | 
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 | 234 | 
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 | 235 | 
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 | 236 | The use of $\sim$ 20 KV hv permits an excellent collection efficiency. Improvement
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 | 237 | 
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 | 238 | of photocathode QE efficiency can be found in the use of reflective photo-cathod
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 | 239 | 
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 | 240 | (30-44 $\%$ instead of $\sim 20 \%$)
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 | 241 | 
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 | 242 | \end{itemize}  
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 | 243 | 
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 | 244 |  
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 | 245 | 
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 | 246 | \begin{thebibliography}{99}
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 | 247 | 
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 | 248 | 
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 | 249 | 
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 | 250 | \bibitem{genie} C. Andreopoulos and H. Gallagher, "Tools for Neutrino Interaction Model Validation", Nucl.Phys.Proc.Suppl.139:247-252,2005 
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 | 251 | 
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 | 252 | \bibitem{xsectiondata} Mike Whalley, "A New Neutrino Cross Section Data Resource", Nucl.Phys.Proc.Suppl.139:241-246,2005 
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 | 253 | 
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 | 254 | 
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 | 255 | 
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 | 256 | \bibitem{costas} Neutrino Interactions and MC Event Generators
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 | 257 | 
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 | 258 | Presented by C. Andreopoulos (Rutherford Lab)
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 | 259 | 
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 | 260 | 
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 | 261 | 
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 | 262 | \bibitem{dunmore} Analysis and background aspects in large water Cherenkov detectors
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 | 263 | 
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 | 264 | Presented by J. Dunmore (Irvine)
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 | 265 | 
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 | 266 |  \bibitem{yanagisawa} Background understanding and suppression in Very Long Baseline Neutrino Oscillation experiments with water Cherenkov detectors
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 | 267 | 
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 | 268 |  Presented by C. Yanagisawa (Stony Brook)
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 | 269 | 
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 | 270 | 
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 | 271 | 
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 | 272 | \bibitem{ferenc}
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 | 273 | 
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 | 274 | Development of new large-aera photosensors in the USA
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 | 275 | 
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 | 276 | 
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 | 277 | 
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 | 278 | Presented by D. Ferenc (Davis) 
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 | 279 | 
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 | 280 | 
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 | 281 | 
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 | 282 | \bibitem{sk}
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 | 283 | 
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 | 284 |  R\&D of a large format hybrid photo-detector (HPD) for a next
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 | 285 | 
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 | 286 | generation water Cherenkov detector. 
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 | 287 | 
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 | 288 | 
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 | 289 | 
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 | 290 | Presented by H. Aihara ( Tokyo)
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 | 291 | 
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 | 292 | 
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 | 293 | 
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 | 294 | \bibitem{pouthas}
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 | 295 | 
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 | 296 | Large photodetector developments in Europe
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 | 297 | 
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 | 298 | 
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 | 299 | 
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 | 300 | Presented by J. Pouthas (Orsay)
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 | 301 | 
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 | 302 | 
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 | 303 | 
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 | 304 | \bibitem{photonis}
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 | 305 | 
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 | 306 | Revisiting the optimum PMT size for water Cherenkov megaton detectors
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 | 307 | 
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 | 308 | 
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 | 309 | 
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 | 310 | Presented by C. Marmonier (Photonis)
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 | 311 | 
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 | 312 | 
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 | 313 | 
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 | 314 | \bibitem{hama}
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 | 315 | 
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 | 316 | Large formats PMTs from Hamamatsu Photonics
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 | 317 | 
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 | 318 | 
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 | 319 | 
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 | 320 | Presented by M.A. Birkel (Hamamatsu)
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 | 321 | 
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 | 322 | 
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 | 323 | 
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 | 324 | \bibitem{burle}
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 | 325 | 
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 | 326 | Burle Indistries: Recent photomultiplier and device developments
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 | 327 | 
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 | 328 | 
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 | 329 | 
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 | 330 | Presented by R. Caracciolo (Burle)
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 | 331 | 
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 | 332 | 
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 | 333 | 
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 | 334 | \bibitem{etube}
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 | 335 | 
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 | 336 | Electron Tubes: Detector considerations for neutrino physic
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 | 337 | 
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 | 338 | 
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 | 339 | 
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 | 340 | Presented by T. Wright (Electron Tubes)
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 | 341 | 
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 | 342 | \end{thebibliography}
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 | 343 | 
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 | 344 | 
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 | 345 | 
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