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Exemple article JCAP avec figures EPS (JEC)

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1\documentclass[a4paper]{iopart}
2\usepackage{iopams}
3\usepackage{graphicx}
4\usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
5\usepackage{eurosym}
6\usepackage{rotating}
7\usepackage[dvips]{color}
8
9%used explicitly in the text
10\newcommand{\be}{\begin{equation}}
11\newcommand{\ee}{\end{equation}}
12\newcommand{\delCP}{\ensuremath{\delta_{\rm CP}}}
13\newcommand{\nubarmu}{\ensuremath{\bar{\nu}_{\mu}}}
14\newcommand{\stheta}{\sin^22\theta_{13}}
15\newcommand{\thetaot}{\ensuremath{\theta_{13}}\,}
16\newcommand{\nue}{\ensuremath{\nu_{e}}}
17\newcommand{\nubare}{\ensuremath{\bar{\nu}_{e}}}
18\newcommand{\He}{\ensuremath{^6{\mathrm{He}\,}}}
19\newcommand{\Ne}{\ensuremath{^{18}{\mathrm{Ne}\,}}}
20\newcommand{\numu}{\ensuremath{\nu_{\mu}}}
21\newcommand{\anue}{\overline{{\mathrm\nu}}_{\mathrm e}}
22\newcommand{\anumu}{\overline{{\mathrm\nu}}_{\mathrm \mu}}
23\newcommand{\REDBLA}[1]{\color{red}#1\color{black}}
24\newcommand{\nunubar}[1]{\mbox{\raisebox{0ex}{$\stackrel{\scriptscriptstyle (-)}{\displaystyle \nu_#1}$}}}
25\newcommand{\WC}{water Cherenkov}
26\newcommand{\degree}    {^{\circ}}
27\newcommand{\flux}{\mbox{$ \mathrm{cm}^{-2}~\mathrm{s}^{-1}$}}
28\newcommand{\BB}{$\beta$B}
29\newcommand{\refTab}[1]{Tab.~\ref{#1}}
30\newcommand{\refFig}[1]{Fig.~\ref{#1}}
31\newcommand{\refSec}[1]{Sec.~\ref{#1}}
32
33
34
35\begin{document}
36%use BST file provided by SPIRES for JHEP and modify it to forbid "to lower case" title
37\bibliographystyle{Campagne}
38
39\title[Large underground, liquid based detectors for astro-particle physics in Europe]{Large underground, liquid based detectors for astro-particle physics in Europe: scientific case and prospects}
40%
41\author{
42D~Autiero~$^1$,
43J~\"Ayst\"o~$^2$,
44A~Badertscher~$^3$,
45L~Bezrukov~$^4$,
46J~Bouchez~$^5$,
47A~Bueno~$^6$,
48J~Busto~$^7$,
49J-E~Campagne~$^8$,
50Ch~Cavata~$^9$,
51L~Chaussard~$^1$,
52A~de~Bellefon~$^{10}$,
53Y~Déclais~$^1$,
54J~Dumarchez~$^{11}$,
55J~Ebert~$^{12}$,
56T~Enqvist~$^{13}$,
57A~Ereditato~$^{14}$,
58F~von~Feilitzsch~$^{15}$,
59P~Fileviez~Perez~$^{16}$,
60M~G\"oger-Neff~$^{17}$,
61S~Gninenko~$^4$,
62W~Gruber~$^3$,
63C~Hagner~$^{12}$,
64M~Hess~$^{14}$,
65K~A~Hochmuth~$^{17}$,
66J~Kisiel~$^{18}$,
67L~Knecht~$^3$
68I~Kreslo~$^{14}$,
69V~A~Kudryavtsev~$^{19}$,
70P~Kuusiniemi~$^{13}$,
71T~Lachenmaier~$^{15}$,
72M~Laffranchi~$^3$,
73B~Lefievre~$^{10}$,
74P~K~Lightfoot~$^{19}$,
75M~Lindner~$^{20}$,
76J~Maalampi~$^2$,
77M~Maltoni~$^{21}$,
78A~Marchionni~$^3$,
79T~Marrodán~Undagoitia~$^{15}$,
80J~Marteau~$^1$,
81A~Meregaglia~$^3$,
82M~Messina~$^{14}$,
83M~Mezzetto~$^{22}$,
84A~Mirizzi~$^{17,23}$,
85L~Mosca~$^9$,
86U~Moser~$^{14}$,
87A~Müller~$^3$,
88G~Natterer~$^3$,
89L~Oberauer~$^{15}$,
90P~Otiougova~$^3$,
91T~Patzak~$^{10}$,
92J~Peltoniemi~$^{13}$,
93W~Potzel~$^{15}$,
94C~Pistillo~$^{14}$,
95G~G~Raffelt~$^{17}$,
96E~Rondio~$^{24}$,
97M~Roos~$^{25}$,
98B~Rossi~$^{14}$,
99A~Rubbia~$^3$,
100N~Savvinov~$^{14}$,
101T~Schwetz~$^{26}$,
102J~Sobczyk~$^{27}$,
103N~J~C~Spooner~$^{19}$,
104D~Stefan~$^{28}$,
105A~Tonazzo~$^{10}$,
106W~Trzaska~$^2$,
107J~Ulbricht~$^3$,
108C~Volpe~$^{29}$,
109J~Winter~$^{15}$,
110M~Wurm~$^{15}$,
111A~Zalewska~$^{28}$
112and
113R~Zimmermann~$^{12}$
114}
115\address{$^1$ IPNL, Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1, CNRS/IN2P3, 69622 Villeurbanne, France}
116\address{$^2$ Department of Physics, University of Jyv\"askyl\"a, Finland}
117\address{$^3$ Institut f\"{u}r Teilchenphysik,  ETHZ, Z\"{u}rich, Switzerland}
118\address{$^4$ Institute for Nuclear Research, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia}
119\address{$^5$ CEA - Saclay, Gif sur Yvette and APC Paris, France}
120\address{$^6$ Dpto Fisica Teorica y del Cosmos \& C.A.F.P.E., Universidad de Granada, Spain}
121\address{$^7$ Centre de Physique des Particules de Marseille (CPPM), IN2P3-CNRS et Université d'Aix-Marseille II, Marseille, France}
122\address{$^8$ LAL, Université Paris-Sud, IN2P3/CNRS, Orsay, France}
123\address{$^9$ CEA - Saclay, Gif sur Yvette, France}
124\address{$^{10}$ Astroparticule et Cosmologie (APC), CNRS, Université Paris VII, CEA, Observatoire de Paris, Paris, France}
125\address{$^{11}$ Laboratoire de Physique Nucléaire et des Hautes Energies (LPNHE), IN2P3-CNRS et Universités Paris VI et Paris VII, Paris, France}
126\address{$^{12}$ Universität Hamburg, Institut für Experimentalphysik, Hamburg, Germany}
127\address{$^{13}$ CUPP, University of Oulu, Finland}
128\address{$^{14}$ Laboratorium f\"{u}r  Hochenergie Physik, Bern Universit\"at, Bern, Switzerland}
129\address{$^{15}$ Technische Universit\"at M\"unchen, Physik-Department E15, Garching, Germany}
130\address{$^{16}$ Centro de Fisica Teorica de Particulas, Instituto Superior Tecnico, Departamento de Fisica, Lisboa, Portugal}
131\address{$^{17}$ Max-Planck-Institut f\"ur Physik (Werner-Heisenberg-Institut), M\"unchen, Germany}
132\address{$^{18}$ Institute of Physics, University of Silesia, Katowice, Poland}
133\address{$^{19}$ Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, United Kingdom}
134\address{$^{20}$ Max-Planck-Institut fuer Kernphysik, Heidelberg, Germany}
135\address{$^{21}$ Departamento de F\'{\i}sica Te\'orica \& Instituto de F\'{\i}sica
136Te\'orica, Facultad de Ciencias C-XI, Universidad Aut\'onoma de Madrid, Cantoblanco, Madrid, Spain}
137\address{$^{22}$ INFN Sezione di Padova, Padova, Italy}
138\address{$^{23}$ INFN Sezione di Bari and Dipartimento di Fisica, Università di Bari, Bari, Italy}
139\address{$^{24}$ A. Soltan Institute for Nuclear Studies, Warsaw, Poland}
140\address{$^{25}$ Department of Physical Sciences, University of Helsinki, Finland}
141\address{$^{26}$ CERN, Physics Department, Theory Division, Geneva, Switzerland}
142\address{$^{27}$ Institute of Theoretical Physics, Wroclaw University, Wroclaw, Poland}
143\address{$^{28}$ H. Niewodniczanski Institute of Nuclear Physics, Krakow, Poland}
144\address{$^{29}$ Institut de Physique Nucleaire d'Orsay (IPNO), Groupe de Physique Theorique, Université de Paris-Sud XI, Orsay, France}
145\ead{campagne@lal.in2p3.fr}
146
147
148%\date{\today}
149
150\begin{abstract}
151
152This document reports on a series of experimental and theoretical studies conducted to
153assess the astro-particle physics potential of three future large-scale particle detectors
154proposed in Europe as next generation underground observatories.
155The proposed apparatus employ three different and, to some extent, complementary detection techniques:
156GLACIER (liquid Argon TPC), LENA (liquid scintillator) and MEMPHYS (\WC), based on the use of large mass of liquids
157as active detection media.
158The results of these studies are presented along with a critical discussion of the performance attainable by the three proposed
159approaches coupled to existing or planned underground laboratories,
160in relation to open and outstanding physics issues such as the search for matter instability, the detection
161of astrophysical- and geo-neutrinos and to the possible use of these detectors in future high-intensity
162neutrino beams.\\
163
164\noindent{\bf Keywords \/ }:
165neutrino detectors,
166neutrino experiments,
167neutrino properties,
168solar and atmospheric neutrinos,
169supernova neutrinos,
170proton decay,
171wimp
172\end{abstract}
173
174\pacs{13.30.a,14.20.Dh,14.60.Pq,26.65.t+,29.40.Gx,29.40.Ka,29.40.Mc,95.55.Vj,95.85.Ry,
17597.60.Bw}
176
177\submitto{Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics}
178
179
180\maketitle
181
182\section{Physics motivation}
183\label{sec:Phys-Intro}
184
185Several outstanding physics goals could be achieved by the next generation of large underground observatories
186in the domain of astro-particle and particle physics, neutrino astronomy and cosmology.
187Proton decay \cite{Pati:1973rp}, in particular, is one of the most exciting prediction of Grand Unified Theories
188(for a review see \cite{Nath:2006ut}) aiming at the
189unification of fundamental forces in Nature. It remains today one of the most relevant open questions
190of particle physics. Its discovery would certainly represent a fundamental milestone, contributing to clarifying our
191understanding of the past and future evolution of the Universe. 
192
193Several experiments have been built and conducted to search for proton decay but they only yielded lower limits to the proton lifetime.
194The window between the predicted proton lifetime (in the simplest models typically below $10^{37} $ years) and that excluded
195 by experiments \cite{Kobayashi:2005pe}
196($O$($10^{33}$) years, depending on the channel) is within reach,
197and the demand to fill the gap grows with the progress in other domains of particle physics, astro-particle physics and cosmology.
198To some extent, also a negative result from next generation high-sensitivity experiments
199would be relevant to rule-out some of the
200theoretical models based on SU(5) and SO(10) gauge symmetry or to further constrain the range of allowed parameters.
201Identifying unambiguously proton decay and measuring its lifetime would set a firm scale for any Unified Theory, narrowing
202the phase space for possible models and their parameters. This will be a mandatory step to go forward
203beyond the Standard Model of elementary particles and interactions.
204
205Another important physics subject is the physics of
206%natural (A. Mirizzi 15may07)
207astrophysical
208neutrinos, as those from supernovae, from the Sun and from the interaction of primary cosmic-rays with the Earth's atmosphere. Neutrinos are above all important messengers from stars.
209Neutrino astronomy has a glorious although recent history, from the detection of solar neutrinos
210 \cite{Davis:1968cp,Hirata:1989zj,Anselmann:1992um,Abdurashitov:1994bc,Smy:2002rz,Aharmim:2005gt,Altmann:2005ix} 
211to the observation of neutrinos from supernova explosion, \cite{Hirata:1987hu,Bionta:1987qt,Alekseev:1988gp},
212acknowledged by the Nobel Prizes awarded to M. Koshiba and R. Davis.
213These observations have given valuable information for a better understanding of the functioning
214of stars and of the properties of neutrinos. However, much more information could be obtained if the energy spectra of
215stellar neutrinos were known with higher accuracy.
216Specific neutrino observations could give detailed information on the conditions of the production zone,
217whether in the Sun or in a supernova.
218A supernova explosion in our galaxy would be extremely important as the evolution mechanism of the collapsed star
219is still a puzzle for astrophysics.
220An even more fascinating challenge would be observing neutrinos from extragalactic supernovae, either from identified sources
221or from a diffuse flux due to unidentified past supernova explosions.
222
223Observing neutrinos produced in the atmosphere as cosmic-ray secondaries
224\cite{Aglietta:1988be,Hirata:1988uy,Hirata:1992ku,Becker-Szendy:1992hq,Daum:1994bf,Allison:1999ms,Ashie:2005ik} 
225gave the first compelling evidence
226for neutrino oscillation \cite{Fukuda:1998mi,Kajita:2006cy}, a process that unambiguously points to the existence of new physics.
227While today the puzzle of missing atmospheric neutrinos can be considered solved,
228there remain challenges related to the sub-dominant oscillation phenomena. In particular, precise measurements of
229atmospheric neutrinos with high statistics and small systematic errors \cite{TabarellideFatis:2002ni}
230would help in resolving ambiguities and degeneracies that hamper the interpretation
231of other experiments, as those planned for future long baseline neutrino oscillation measurements.
232
233Another example of outstanding open questions is that of the knowledge of the interior of the Earth. 
234It may look hard to believe, but we know much better what happens inside the Sun than inside our own planet.
235There are very few messengers that can provide information, while a mere theory is not sufficient for building a credible model for the Earth. However, there is a new unexploited window to the Earth's interior,
236by observing neutrinos produced in the radioactive decays of heavy elements in the matter. Until now, only the KamLAND
237experiment  \cite{Araki:2005qa} has been able to study these so-called geo-neutrinos opening the way to a completely new
238field of research.  The small event rate, however,  does not allow to draw significant conclusions.
239
240The fascinating physics phenomena outlined above, in addition to other important subjects that we will address in the following,
241could be investigated by a new generation of multipurpose
242experiments based on improved detection techniques.
243The envisioned detectors must necessarily be very massive (and consequently large)
244due to the smallness of the cross-sections and to the low rate of signal events,
245and able to provide very low experimental background.
246The required signal to noise ratio can only be achieved in underground laboratories suitably shielded against cosmic-rays
247and environmental radioactivity.
248We can identify three different and, to large extent, complementary technologies capable to meet the challenge, based
249on large scale use of liquids for building large-size, volume-instrumented detectors
250
251\begin{itemize}
252\item Water Cherenkov.
253As the cheapest available (active) target material, water is the only liquid that is realistic for extremely large detectors,
254up to several hundreds or thousands of ktons; \WC\ detectors have sufficiently good resolution in energy,
255position and angle. The technology is well proven, as previously used for the IMB, Kamiokande and Super-Kamiokande
256experiments.
257
258\item Liquid scintillator.
259Experiments using a liquid scintillator as active target
260provide high-energy resolution and offer low-energy threshold.  They are
261particularly attractive for low energy particle detection, as for example solar
262neutrinos and geo-neutrinos.  Also liquid scintillator detectors feature a well established technology,
263already successfully applied at relatively large scale to the Borexino
264\cite{Back:2004zn} and KamLAND \cite{Araki:2004mb} experiments.
265
266
267\item Liquid Argon Time Projection Chambers (LAr TPC).
268This detection technology has among the three the best performance in identifying the topology of
269interactions and decays of particles, thanks to the bubble-chamber-like imaging performance.
270Liquid Argon TPCs are very versatile and work well with a wide particle energy range.
271Experience on such detectors has been gained within the ICARUS project \cite{Amerio:2004ze,Arneodo:2001tx}.
272\end{itemize}
273
274Three experiments are proposed to employ the above detection techniques: MEMPHYS \cite{deBellefon:2006vq} for \WC,
275LENA \cite{Oberauer:2005kw, Marrodan:2006} for liquid scintillator
276and GLACIER \cite{Rubbia:2004tz,Rubbia:2004yq,Ereditato:2004ru,Ereditato:2005ru,Ereditato:2005yx} for Liquid Argon.
277In this paper we report on the study of the physics potential of the experiments and identify features of complementarity
278amongst the three techniques.
279
280Needless to say, the availability of future neutrino beams from particle accelerators
281would provide an additional bonus to the above experiments.
282Measuring oscillations with artificial neutrinos (of well known kinematical features)
283with a sufficiently long baseline would allow to accurately determine the oscillation parameters
284(in particular the mixing angle $\theta_{13}$ and the possible
285CP violating phase in the mixing matrix).
286The envisaged detectors may then be used for observing neutrinos from the future Beta Beams and Super Beams
287in the optimal energy range for each experiment. A common example
288%C Volpe 19/10/07 is a low-energy Beta Beam from CERN to MEMPHYS at Frejus, 130 km away
289is a Beta Beam from CERN to MEMPHYS at Frejus, 130 km away \cite{Campagne:2006yx}.
290High energy beams have been suggested \cite{Rubbia:2006pi},
291favoring longer baselines of up to $O$(2000~km).
292%add C. Volpe review
293An exhaustive review on the different Beta Beam scenario can be found in the reference \cite{Volpe:2006in}.
294The ultimate Neutrino Factory facility will require a magnetized detector to fully exploit the simultaneous availability of
295neutrinos and antineutrinos. This subject is however beyond the scope of the present study.
296
297Finally, there is a possibility of (and the hope for) unexpected
298discoveries. The history of physics has shown that
299several experiments have made their glory with discoveries in research fields that were outside the original goals of the experiments.
300Just to quote an example, we can mention the Kamiokande detector, mainly designed to search for proton decay
301and actually contributing to the observation of atmospheric neutrino oscillations, to the clarification of the solar neutrino puzzle and
302to the first observation of supernova neutrinos \cite{Hirata:1987hu,Hirata:1988ad,Hirata:1989zj,Hirata:1988uy,
303Fukuda:1998mi}.
304All the three proposed experiments, thanks to their
305outstanding boost in mass and performance, will certainly provide a significant potential for surprises and unexpected discoveries.
306
307\section{Description of the three detectors}
308\label{sec:Phys-detector}
309
310The three detectors' basic parameters are listed in \refTab{tab:Phys-detector-summary}.
311All of them have active targets of tens to hundreds kton mass and are to be installed in underground laboratories to be protected against background induced by cosmic-rays. As already said,
312the large size of the detectors is motivated by the extremely low cross-section of neutrinos and/or by the rareness of the
313interesting events searched for. Some details of the detectors are discussed in the following, while the matters related to the possible underground site are presented in Section~\ref{sec:Phys-Sites}.
314
315%\begin{sidewaystable}
316\begin{table}
317\caption{\label{tab:Phys-detector-summary}Basic parameters of the three detector (baseline) design.} 
318%\begin{indented}
319%\item[]
320\lineup
321\begin{tabular}{@{}llll}
322\br
323
324                   &    GLACIER            &   LENA    &    MEMPHYS\\
325\mr
326
327\multicolumn{4}{@{}l}{Detector dimensions}          \\
328type of cylinder              &  $1$ vert.    & $1$ horiz.    & $3\div5$ vert. \\
329    diam. (m) & $\0 70$ & $\0 30$ & $\0 65$ \\   
330    length (m) & $\0 20$ & $100$ & $\0 65$ \\     
331typical mass (kton)   & $100$  &  $\0 50$  & $600\div800$\\
332\mr
333\multicolumn{4}{@{}l}{Active target and readout}          \\
334        type of target  & liq. Argon      &liq. scintillator  & water \\
335                        & (boiling)         &                      & (opt. 0.2\% GdCl$_3$) \\
336readout type      & \parbox[t]{3cm}{
337%                                                                                                                                               \begin{itemize}
338%                                                                                                                                               \item[$e^-$ drift] 2 perp. views, $10^5$ channels, ampli. in gas phase
339%                                                                                                                                               \item[\v{C} light] 27,000 8" PMTs, $\sim 20\%$ coverage
340%                                                                                                                                               \item[Scint. light] 1,000 8" PMTs
341%                                                                                                                                               \end{itemize}                                                                                                                                   
342                                                                                                                                                $e^-$ drift: 2 perp. views, $10^5$ channels, ampli. in gas phase;\\ 
343                                                                                                                                                Cher. light: $27\ 000$ 8" PMTs, $\sim 20\%$ coverage;\\
344                                                                                                                                                Scint. light: $1000$ 8" PMTs
345                                                                                                                                                }
346                  & \parbox[t]{25mm}{$12\ 000$\\ 20" PMTs\\ $\gtrsim 30\%$ coverage} 
347                  & \parbox[t]{25mm}{$81\ 000$\\ 12" PMTs\\$\sim 30\%$ coverage} \\
348\br
349\end{tabular}
350%\end{indented}
351\end{table}
352%\end{sidewaystable}
353%
354\subsection{Liquid Argon TPC}
355
356GLACIER (Fig.~\ref{fig:Phys-GLACIERdetector}) is the foreseen extrapolation up to $100$~kton
357of the liquid Argon Time Projection Chamber technique.
358The detector can be mechanically subdivided into two parts,
359the liquid Argon tank and the inner detector instrumentation.
360For simplicity, we assume at this stage that the two aspects can be largely decoupled.
361 
362\begin{figure}
363\begin{center}
364\includegraphics[width=0.7\columnwidth]{Fig1-T100K_3d.eps}
365\end{center}
366\caption{\label{fig:Phys-GLACIERdetector} Artistic view of a 100~kton single-tank liquid Argon TPC detector.
367The electronic crates are located at the top of the dewar.}     
368\end{figure}
369
370The basic idea behind this detector is to use a single 100~kton boiling liquid Argon cryogenic tank with
371cooling directly performed with liquid Argon (self-refrigerating). Events are reconstructed in 3D by using the
372information provided by ionization in liquid. The imaging capabilities and the excellent space resolution
373of the device make this detector an "electronic bubble chamber".
374The signal from scintillation and Cherenkov light readout complete the information contributing to the event reconstruction.
375
376As far as light collection is concerned one can profit from the ICARUS R\&D program that
377has shown that it is possible to operate photomultipliers (PMTs) directly immersed in the liquid Argon \cite{Amerio:2004ze}.
378In order to be sensitive to deep UV (DUV) scintillation ($< 300$nm), PMTs are coated with a wavelength shifter (WLS), for instance
379tetraphenyl-butadiene.
380About 1000~immersed phototubes with WLS would
381be used to identify the (isotropic and bright) scintillation light. To detect
382Cherenkov radiation about $27\ 000$~8''-phototubes without WLS would provide a 20\% coverage of the detector surface.
383The latter PMTs should have single photon
384counting capabilities in order to count the number of Cherenkov photons.
385
386Charge amplification and an extreme  liquid purity against electronegative compounds
387(although attainable by commercial purification systems) is needed to allow long drift distances of the ionization/imaging electrons
388 ($\approx 20\rm\ m$). For this reason,
389the detector will run in the so-called bi-phase mode. Namely, drifting electrons produced in the liquid phase
390are extracted into the gas phase with
391the help of an electric field and amplified in order to compensate the charge loss due to
392attenuation along the drift path.
393The final charge signal is then read out  by means of Large Electron Multiplier (LEM) devices, providing X-Y information. The Z coordinate
394is given by the drift time measurement, proportional to the drift length.
395A possible extension of the present detector design envisages the immersion of the sensitive volume in an external magnetic
396field \cite{Ereditato:2005yx}.
397Existing experience from specialized Liquified Natural Gases (LNG) companies and studies conducted in collaboration with
398Technodyne LtD UK,  have been ingredients for a first step in assessing the feasibility of the detector and of its operation
399in an underground site.
400
401\subsection{Liquid scintillator detector}
402
403The LENA detector is cylindrical in shape with a length of about 100\,m and 30\,m diameter (\refFig{fig:Phys-LENAdetector}).
404The inner volume corresponding to a radius of 13\,m
405contains approximately $5 \times 10^4$\,m$^3$ of liquid scintillator.
406The outer part of the volume is filled with water, acting as a
407veto for identifying muons entering the detector from outside.
408Both the outer and the inner volume are enclosed in steel tanks
409of 3 to 4\,cm wall thickness. For most purposes, a fiducial volume is defined by excluding
410the volume corresponding to 1\,m distance to the inner tank walls. The fiducial volume so defined amounts
411to 88\,$\%$ of the total detector volume.
412
413In the current design, the main axis of the cylinder is placed horizontally. A tunnel-shaped
414cavern housing the detector is considered as realistically feasible for most of the envisioned detector locations. In
415respect to accelerator physics, the axis could be oriented towards
416the neutrino source in order to contain the full length of
417muon and electron tracks produced in charged-current neutrino interactions in the liquid scintillator.
418
419The baseline configuration for the light detection in the inner volume foresees
420$12\ 000$~PMTs of 20'' diameter mounted onto
421the inner cylinder wall and covering about 30\,$\%$ of the surface. As
422an option, light concentrators can be installed in front of the PMTs,
423hence increasing the surface coverage $c$ to values larger than
42450\,$\%$. Alternatively, $c=30\,\%$ can be reached by equipping
4258'' PMTs with light concentrators, thereby reducing the cost when comparing to
426the baseline configuration. Additional PMTs are supplied in the outer
427veto to detect (and reject) the Cherenkov light from events due to incoming cosmic muons.
428Possible candidates as liquid scintillator material are pure
429phenyl-o-xylylethane (PXE), a mixture of 20\,$\%$ PXE and 80\,$\%$
430Dodecane, and linear Alkylbenzene (LAB). All three liquids exhibit low
431toxicity and provide high flash and inflammation points.
432
433\begin{figure}
434\begin{center}
435\includegraphics[width=0.7\columnwidth]{Fig2-LenaPictureNov06.eps}
436\end{center}
437\caption{\label{fig:Phys-LENAdetector}Schematic drawing of the LENA detector. Reprinted figure with the permission from \cite{Wurm:2007cy}.}   
438\end{figure}
439
440\subsection{Water Cherenkov}
441
442The MEMPHYS detector (\refFig{fig:Phys-MEMPHYSdetector}) is an extrapolation of the  \WC\ Super-Kamiokande
443detector to a mass as large as $730$~kton.
444The detector is composed of up to 5 shafts containing separate tanks.
4453 tanks are enough to total 440~kton fiducial mass. This is the configuration which is used hereafter.
446Each shaft has 65~m diameter and 65~m height representing an increase by a factor 8 with respect to Super-Kamiokande.
447
448The Cherenkov light rings produced by fast particles moving within the inner water volume are reconstructed by PMTs placed
449on the inner tank wall.
450The PMT housing surface starts at  2~m from the outer wall and is covered with about $81\ 000$ 12" PMTs to reach a 30\% surface coverage,
451in or alternatively equivalent to a 40\% coverage with 20" PMTs.
452The fiducial volume is defined by an additional conservative guard of 2~m.
453The outer volume  between the PMT surface and the water vessel is instrumented with 8" PMTs.
454If not otherwise stated, the Super-Kamiokande analysis procedures for efficiency calculations, background reduction, etc.  are
455used in computing the physics potential of MEMPHYS.
456In USA and Japan, two analogous projects (UNO and Hyper-Kamiokande) have been proposed.
457These detectors are similar in many respects and the physics potential presented hereafter may well be transposed to them.
458Specific characteristics that are not identical in the proposed projects are the distance from
459available or envisaged accelerators and nuclear reactors, sources of artificial neutrino fluxes, and the depth of the host laboratory.
460
461Currently, there is a very promising ongoing R\&D activity concerning
462the possibility of introducing Gadolinium salt (GdCl${}_3$) inside Super-Kamiokande.
463The physics goal is to decrease the background for many physics channels by detecting and tagging neutrons produced in
464the Inverse Beta Decay (IBD) interaction of $\bar{\nu}_e$ on free protons.
465For instance, 100~tons of GdCl${}_3$ in Super-Kamiokande would yield more then 90\% neutron captures on Gd  \cite{Beacom:2003nk}.
466
467\begin{figure}
468\begin{center}
469\includegraphics[width=0.7\columnwidth]{Fig3-MEMPHYS.eps}
470\end{center}
471\caption{\label{fig:Phys-MEMPHYSdetector}Layout of the MEMPHYS detector in the future Fréjus laboratory.}       
472\end{figure}
473
474%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
475\section{Underground sites}
476\label{sec:Phys-Sites}
477
478The proposed large detectors require underground laboratories of adequate size and depth, naturally protected against
479cosmic-rays that represent a potential source of background events mainly for non-accelerator experiments, that cannot exploit
480the peculiar time stamp provided by the accelerator beam spill.
481
482Additional characteristics of these sites contributing to their qualification as candidates for the proposed experiments
483are: the type and quality of the rock allowing the practical feasibility of large caverns at reasonable cost and within reasonable time,
484the distance from existing (or future) accelerators and nuclear reactors, the type and quality of the access, the geographical position, the environmental conditions, etc.
485
486The presently identified worldwide candidate sites are located in three geographical regions: North-America, far-east Asia
487and Europe. In this paper we consider the European region, where, at this stage, the following sites
488are assumed as candidates: Boulby (UK), Canfranc (Spain), Fréjus (France/Italy), Gran Sasso (Italy),
489Pyhäsalmi (Finland) and Sieroszewice (Poland).
490Most of the sites are existing national or international underground laboratories with associated infrastructure
491and experimental halls already used for experiments.
492The basic features of the sites are presented on \refTab{tab:Phys-site-parameters}.
493For the Gran Sasso Laboratory a  possible new (additional) site
494is envisaged to be located 10 km away from the present underground laboratory,
495outside the protected area of the neighboring Gran Sasso National Park.
496The possibility of under-water solutions, such as for instance Pylos for the LENA project, is not taken into account here.
497The identification and measurement of the different background components in the candidate sites (muons, fast neutrons
498from muon interactions, slow neutrons from nuclear reactions in the rock, gammas, electrons/positrons and alphas from
499radioactive decays,\dots) is underway, mainly in the context of the ILIAS European (JRA) Network ($http://ilias.in2p3.fr/$).
500%The collection of the presently known values for these background components are reported in \refTab{tab:Phys-site-parameters}.
501
502None of the existing sites has yet a sufficiently large cavity able to accommodate the foreseen detectors.
503For two of the sites (Fréjus and Pyhäsalmi) a preliminary feasibility study for large excavation at deep depth
504has already been performed. For the Fréjus site the main conclusion drawn from simulations constrained by a series
505of rock parameter measurements made during the Fréjus road tunnel excavation is that the "shaft shape" is strongly preferred
506compared to the "tunnel shape", as long as large cavities are required. As mentioned above,
507several (up to 5) of such shaft cavities with a diameter of about 65~m
508(for a corresponding volume of $250\ 000$~m${}^3$) each, seem feasible in the region around the middle of the Fréjus tunnel, at a depth of 4800~m.w.e.
509For the Pyhäsalmi site, the preliminary study has been performed for two main cavities with tunnel shape and
510dimensions of $(20 \times 20 \times 120)$~m${}^3$ and $(20 \times 20 \times 50)$~m${}^3$, respectively,
511and for one shaft-shaped cavity with 25~m in diameter and 25~m in height, all at a depth of about 1430~m of rock (4000~m.w.e.).
512
513\begin{sidewaystable}
514%\begin{table}
515\caption{\label{tab:Phys-site-parameters} 
516Summary of characteristics of some underground sites envisioned for the proposed detectors.} 
517%
518\begin{tabular}{@{}lllllll} 
519\br 
520Site &     Boulby      &       Canfranc          &      Fréjus     &  Gran Sasso   &   Pyh\"asalmi  & Sieroszowice\\ 
521\mr 
522Location &    UK       &      Spain           &   Italy-France border &      Italy  &      Finland  &  Poland     \\ 
523Dist. from CERN (km)&  1050  &  630          &          130       &     730        &     2300     &    950       \\ 
524Type of access&  Mine  &  Somport tunnel     &  Fréjus tunnel     & Highway\\ tunnel &  Mine        &   Shaft      \\ 
525Vert. depth (m.w.e)&  2800 & 2450           &    4800           &   3700       &  4000         &  2200       \\ 
526Type of rock& salt     &   hard rock          &  hard rock         & hard rock     & hard rock      &  salt \& rock \\ 
527 Type of cavity&       &                       &   shafts          &               &   tunnel       &    shafts    \\ 
528Size of cavity &       &                       & $\Phi = 65~\mathrm{m}$ &          & $(20\times20\times 120)\mathrm{m^3}$          & $\Phi = 74~\mathrm{m}$             \\ 
529         &             &                         & $H=80~\mathrm{m}$ &             &                & $H=37~\mathrm{m}$ \\ 
530$\mu$ Flux (m$^{-2}$day$^{-1}$)&  34 & 406 &             4         &    24         &      9          &  not available            \\ 
531\br
532\end{tabular} 
533%
534%\end{table}
535\end{sidewaystable}
536%
537%n Flux ($10^{-6}$~cm$^{-2}$s$^{-1}$)  & $O(1)$ &  \parbox{3cm}{\center{1.6 (0-0.63~eV)\\ 4.0 (2-6~MeV)}}                                                                                                                                                & *
538
539%                                                                                                                                                &  \parbox{3cm}{\center{2.8 (>100~keV)\\ 1.3 (>1~MeV)}}
540
541%                                                                                                                                                & 3.82 (integral) & * \\
542
543%$\gamma$ Flux (cm$^{-2}$s$^{-1}$)    & * & 7.0 (>4~MeV)  & * & * & $2 \times 10^{-2}$  & *\\
544%$^{238}$U (ppm) Rock/Cavern  & ? & 0.84/1.90   & 28-44 Bq/m$^3$   & 0.07      & 30 Bq/kg & $0.017 \pm 0.003$ Bq/kg\\
545%$^{232}$Th (ppm) Rock/Cavern  & ? & 2.45/1.40   & 4-19 Bq/m$^3$   & 0.12      & 76 Bq/kg & $0.008 \pm 0.001$ Bq/kg\\
546%K (Bq/kg)          Rock/Cavern  & ? & 213/77     & 267-625 Bq/m$^3$   & 1130      & 680 & $4.0 \pm 0.9$ Bq/kg\\
547%Rn (Bq/m$^3$) Cavern (Vent. ON/OFF) &?  & 15-150    &  10-148     &  *  & 50-100 Bq/kg & $10-50$\\
548%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
549\section{Matter instability: sensitivity to proton decay}
550
551For all relevant aspects of the proton stability in Grand Unified Theories,
552in strings and in branes we refer to~\cite{Nath:2006ut}.   
553Since proton decay is the most dramatic prediction coming
554from theories of the unification of fundamental interactions, there is a realistic hope to be able to test these scenarios with next
555generation experiments exploiting the above mentioned large mass, underground detectors.
556For this reason, the knowledge of a theoretical upper bound on the lifetime of the proton is very
557helpful in assessing the potential of future experiments.   
558Recently, a model-independent upper bound on the proton decay lifetime has
559been worked out~\cite{Dorsner:2004xa}
560
561%\begin{widetext}
562\begin{equation}
563\fl
564        \tau_p^{upper} =       
565                \left\{\begin{array}{lr}
566        6.0 \times 10^{39} & (\mathrm{Majorana})
567         \\ 
568         2.8 \times 10^{37}  & (\mathrm{Dirac})
569        \end{array}\right\}
570                 \times 
571         \frac{\left(M_X/10^{16}GeV\right)^4}{\alpha_{GUT}^2} \times \left( \frac{0.003GeV^3}{\alpha} \right)^2 \ \mathrm{years}         
572\end{equation}
573%\end{widetext}
574%%Modif by JEC according to PFP 14May07
575%%where $M_X$ is the mass of the superheavy gauge bosons, the parameter $\alpha_{GUT}= g_{GUT}^2 / 4 \pi$,
576%%$g_{GUT}$ is the gauge coupling at the Grand Unified scale and $\alpha$ is the matrix element.
577where $M_X$ is the mass of the superheavy gauge bosons mediating
578proton decay, the parameter $\alpha_{GUT}= g_{GUT}^2 / 4 \pi$,
579with $g_{GUT}$ the gauge coupling at the grand unified scale
580and $\alpha$ is the relevant matrix element.
581\refFig{fig:Phys-PDK-Majorana} shows the present parameter space allowed by experiments
582in the case of Majorana neutrinos.
583
584Most of the models (Super-symmetric or non Super-symmetric) predict a proton lifetime $\tau_p$ below
585those upper bounds ($10^{33-37}$~years). This is  particularly interesting since this falls within the possible
586range of the proposed experiments.
587In order to have a better idea of the proton decay predictions, we list
588the results from different models in \refTab{tab:Phys-PDK-Models}.
589
590No specific simulations for MEMPHYS have been carried out yet. Therefore,
591here we rely on the studies done for the similar UNO detector, adapting the results to MEMPHYS, which, however, features
592an overall better PMT coverage.
593
594\begin{figure}
595\begin{center}
596\includegraphics[width=0.7\columnwidth]{Fig4-PavelMajoranaNew.eps}
597\end{center}
598\caption{\label{fig:Phys-PDK-Majorana} Isoplot for the upper bounds on the total
599proton lifetime in years in the Majorana neutrino case in the
600$M_X$--$\alpha_{GUT}$ plane. The value of the unifying coupling
601constant is varied from $1/60$ to $1/10$. The conventional values
602for $M_X$ and $\alpha_{GUT}$ in SUSY GUTs are marked with thick
603lines. The experimentally excluded region is given in black. Reprinted figure with permission from~\cite{Dorsner:2004xa}.}
604\end{figure}
605
606\begin{table}
607\caption{\label{tab:Phys-PDK-Models}
608Summary of several predictions for the proton partial lifetimes (years). References for the
609different models are: (1) \cite{Georgi:1974sy}, (2) \cite{Dorsner:2005fq,Dorsner:2005ii}, (3) \cite{Lee:1994vp}
610(4)  \cite{Murayama:2001ur,Bajc:2002bv,Bajc:2002pg,Emmanuel-Costa:2003pu},
611(5) \cite{Babu:1992ia,Aulakh:2003kg,Fukuyama:2004pb,Goh:2003nv},
612(6) \cite{Friedmann:2002ty},
613(7) \cite{Bajc:2006ia},
614(8) \cite{Perez:2007rm}.}
615\begin{tabular}{@{}llll} \br
616Model       &   Decay modes     &  Prediction   &  References \\ \mr
617Georgi-Glashow model & - &  ruled out      &        (1)        \\ 
618\parbox{4cm}{\center{Minimal realistic\\ non-SUSY $SU(5)$}} & all channels & $\tau_p^{upper} = 1.4 \times 10^{36}$ & (2)
619\\[6mm]
620Two Step Non-SUSY $SO(10)$ &  $p \to e^+ \pi^0$ &  $\approx 10^{33-38}$ & (3)  \\[5mm] 
621Minimal SUSY $SU(5)$   &   $p \to  \bar{\nu}K^+$  &  $\approx 10^{32-34}$  & (4)
622\\ 
623\\[-5mm]
624\parbox{4cm}{\center{SUSY $SO(10)$ \\ with $10_H$, and $126_H$}} & $p \to \bar{\nu} K^+$ & $\approx 10^{33-36}$ &  (5) 
625\\[6mm]
626M-Theory($G_2$)   & $p \to e^+\pi^0$    &  $\approx 10^{33-37}$    & (6)  \\[4mm]
627 $SU(5)$ with $24_F$  & $p \to \pi^0 e^+ $ & $\approx 10^{35-36}$   & (7)\\[4mm]
628 Renormalizable Adjoint $SU(5)$ & $p \to \pi^0 e^+ $ & $\approx 10^{35-36}$   & (8)\\
629\br
630                \end{tabular}
631\end{table}
632
633In order to assess the physics potential of a large liquid Argon Time Projection Chambers such as GLACIER,
634a detailed simulation of signal efficiency and
635background sources, including atmospheric neutrinos and cosmogenic
636backgrounds was carried out \cite{Bueno:2007um}. Liquid Argon TPCs,
637offering high space granularity and energy resolution, low-energy detection threshold,
638and excellent background discrimination, should 
639yield  large signal over background ratio for many of the possible proton
640decay modes, hence allowing reaching partial lifetime sensitivities in
641the range of $10^{34}-10^{35}$~years for exposures up to 1000~kton year.
642This can often be accomplished in quasi background-free conditions optimal for discoveries
643at the few events level, corresponding
644to atmospheric neutrino background rejections of the order of $10^5$.
645
646Multi-prong decay modes like $p\rightarrow \mu^- \pi^+ K^+$
647or $p\rightarrow e^+\pi^+\pi^-$ and channels involving kaons like
648$p\rightarrow K^+\bar\nu$, $p\rightarrow e^+K^0$ and $p\rightarrow \mu^+K^0$
649are particularly appealing, since liquid Argon imaging
650provides typically one order of magnitude efficiency increase for similar
651or better background conditions, compared to water Cherenkov detectors.
652%From GLACIER after referee
653%Up to a factor of two improvement in efficiency is expected for modes like $p\rightarrow e^+\gamma$
654%and $p\rightarrow \mu^+\gamma$, thanks to the clean photon identification
655%and separation from $\pi^0$.
656Thanks to the clean photon identification
657and separation from $\pi^0$, it is expected an efficiency of $98\%$ for both the channels
658$p\rightarrow e^+\gamma$ and $p\rightarrow \mu^+\gamma$ which constitute an improvement %A  Bueno 14/10/07 following referee of $35\%$ and $92\%$ respectively compared to Super-Kamiokande present result.
659of $38\%$ and $63\%$ respectively compared to Super-Kamiokande results \cite{KearnSnowmass:2001}.
660Channels such as $p\rightarrow e^+\pi^0$ and $p\rightarrow \mu^+\pi^0$,
661dominated by intrinsic nuclear effects,
662yield similar performance as water Cherenkov detectors.
663
664An important feature of GLACIER is that thanks to the self-shielding
665and 3D-imaging properties, the above expected performance
666remains valid even at shallow depths, where cosmogenic background sources are important.
667The possibility of using a very large-area, annular, muon-veto active shielding, to
668further suppress cosmogenic backgrounds at shallow depths is also a very promising
669option to complement the GLACIER detector.
670
671In order to quantitatively estimate the potential of the LENA detector
672in measuring proton lifetime, a Monte Carlo simulation for the
673decay channel $p\to K^{+}\overline{{\nu}}$ has been performed. For
674this purpose, the GEANT4 simulation toolkit \cite{Agostinelli:2002hh} has been
675used, including optical processes as scintillation, Cherenkov light
676production, Rayleigh scattering and light absorption. From these simulations one obtains
677a light yield  of $\sim 110$~p.e./MeV \cite{Undagoitia:1-2uu} for an event in the
678center of the detector. In  addition, the semi-empirical Birk's formula
679has been introduced into the code in order to take into account the so-called quenching effects.
680
681Following studies performed for the UNO detector, the detection efficiency for $p \rightarrow e^+\pi^0$
682is $43\%$ for a 20" PMT coverage of 40\% or its equivalent, as envisioned for
683MEMPHYS. The corresponding estimated
684atmospheric neutrino induced background is at the level of $2.25$~events/Mton year.
685From these efficiencies and background levels,
686proton decay sensitivity as a function of detector exposure can be
687estimated. A $10^{35}$ years partial
688lifetime ($\tau_p/B$) could be reached at the 90\% C.L. for a 5~Mton year exposure (10~years) with MEMPHYS
689(similar to case A in \refFig{fig:pdk1} compiled by the UNO collaboration \cite{Jung:1999jq}). Beyond that exposure, tighter cuts may be envisaged to further reduce the atmospheric neutrino background to $0.15$~events/Mton year, by selecting quasi exclusively the free proton decays.
690%
691\begin{figure}
692\begin{center}
693\includegraphics[width=0.7\columnwidth]{Fig5-epi0-WC-Shiozawa.eps}
694\end{center}
695\caption{\label{fig:pdk1} Sensitivity to the $e^+\pi^0$ proton decay mode
696compiled by the UNO collaboration. MEMPHYS corresponds to case (A). Reprinted figure with permission from~\cite{Jung:1999jq}.}
697\end{figure}
698
699The positron and the two photons issued from the $\pi^0$ gives clear events
700in the GLACIER detector. The $\pi^0$ is absorbed by the nucleus
701in $45\%$ of the cases. Assuming a perfect particle and track identification,
702one may expect a $45\%$ efficiency and a background level of $1$~event/Mton year.
703For a 1~Mton year (10~years) exposure with GLACIER one
704reaches $\tau_p/B > 0.4 \times 10^{35}$~years at the 90$\%$ C.L. (Fig.~\ref{fig:GLACIERpdk}).
705%
706\begin{figure}
707\begin{center}
708\includegraphics[width=0.7\columnwidth]{Fig6-limit_pdk_expo.eps}
709\end{center}
710\caption{\label{fig:GLACIERpdk} Expected proton decay lifetime limits ($\tau / B$ at 90\% C.L.)
711as a function of exposure for GLACIER. Only atmospheric neutrino background
712has been taken into account. Reprinted figure with permission from~\cite{Bueno:2007um}.}
713\end{figure}
714
715In a liquid scintillator detector such as LENA the decay $p\to e^{+}\pi^{0}$ would
716produce a $938$~MeV signal coming from the $e^{+}$ and the $\pi^{0}$
717shower. Only atmospheric neutrinos are expected to cause background
718events in this energy range. Using the fact that showers from both
719$e^{+}$ and $\pi^{0}$ propagate 4~m in opposite directions
720before being stopped, atmospheric neutrino background can be
721reduced. Applying this method, the current limit for this channel
722($\tau_p/B=5.4~10^{33}$~years \cite{Nakaya:2005nk}) could be improved.
723%
724In LENA, proton decay events via the mode $p\to K^{+}\overline{{\nu}}$
725have a very clear signature. The kaon causes a prompt monoenergetic
726signal of 105~MeV together with a larger delayed signal from its decay.
727The kaon has a lifetime of 12.8~ns and two main decay channels: with a
728probability of 63.43~$\%$ it decays via $K^{+}\to\mu^{+}{\nu_{\mu}}$
729and with 21.13\%, via \mbox{$K^{+}\to\pi^{+} \pi^{0}$}.
730
731Simulations of proton decay events and atmospheric neutrino background
732have  been performed and a pulse shape analysis has been applied.
733From this analysis an efficiency of 65\% for
734the detection of a proton decay has been determined and a
735background  suppression of $\sim2 \times10^{4}$ has  been
736achieved \cite{Undagoitia:1-2uu}. A detail study of background implying pion and
737kaon production in atmospheric  neutrino reactions has been performed
738leading to a background rate of $0.064~\mathrm{year}^{-1}$ due to the reaction
739${\nu}_{\mu}+p\to \mu^{-}+K^{+}+p$.
740
741For the current proton lifetime limit for the channel considered
742($\tau_p/B=2.3 \times 10^{33}$~year) \cite{Kobayashi:2005pe}, about 40.7 proton decay
743events would be observed in LENA after ten years
744with less than 1 background event. If no signal is seen in the detector
745within ten years, the lower limit for the lifetime of the proton
746will be set at $\tau_p/B>4~\times10^{34}$~years at the $90\%$~C.L.
747
748For GLACIER, the latter is a quite clean
749channel due to the presence of a strange meson and no other particles in
750the final state. Using $dE/dx$ versus range as the discriminating variable
751in a Neural Network algorithm, less than $1\%$ of the kaons are mis-identified as protons.
752For this channel, the selection efficiency is high ($97\%$)
753for an atmospheric neutrino background $< 1$~event/Mton year.
754In case of absence of signal and for a detector location at a depth of
7551~km.w.e., one expects for 1~Mton~year (10~years) exposure one background event due to cosmogenic sources. This translates into a limit
756$\tau_p/B > 0.6 \times 10^{35}$~years at 90\% C.L. This result remains
757valid even at shallow depths where
758cosmogenic background sources are a very important limiting factor for proton
759decay searches.
760For example, the study done in \cite{Bueno:2007um} shows that
761a three-plane active veto at a shallow
762depth of about 200~m rock overburden under a hill yields
763similar sensitivity for $p\rightarrow K^+\bar\nu$ as a 3000~m.w.e. deep detector.
764
765For MEMPHYS one should rely on the detection of the decay products of the $K^+$
766since its momentum ($340$~MeV/c) is below the water Cherenkov threshold of $570$~MeV/c: a 236~MeV/c muon and its
767decay electron (type I) or a 205~MeV/c $\pi^+$ and $\pi^0$
768(type II), with the possibility of a delayed (12~ns) coincidence
769with the 6~MeV ${}^{15}\mathrm{N}$ de-excitation prompt $\gamma$ (Type III).
770Using the known imaging and timing performance of Super-Kamiokande, the efficiency for the reconstruction of
771$p \rightarrow \overline{\nu}K^+$ is 33\% (I), 6.8\% (II)
772and 8.8\% (III), and the background is 2100, 22 and 6 events/Mton year, respectively. For the
773prompt $\gamma$ method, the background is dominated by
774miss-reconstruction. As stated by the UNO Collaboration \cite{Jung:1999jq}, there are good
775reasons to believe that this background can be lowered by at least a factor of two, corresponding
776to the atmospheric neutrino interaction $\nu p \rightarrow \nu
777\Lambda K^+$. In these conditions, and taking into account the Super-Kamiokande performance,
778a 5~Mton year exposure for MEMPHYS would allow reaching $\tau_p/B > 2 \times 10^{34}$~years (\refFig{fig:pdk9_jbz}).
779
780\begin{figure}
781\begin{center}
782\includegraphics[width=0.7\columnwidth]{Fig7-Knu-WC-Shiozawa.eps}
783\end{center}
784\caption{\label{fig:pdk9_jbz}
785Expected sensitivity to the $\nu K^+$ proton decay mode as a function of
786exposure compiled by the UNO collaboration which may be applied for the MEMPHYS detector (see text for details). Reprinted figure with permission from~\cite{Jung:1999jq}.}
787\end{figure}
788%
789
790A preliminary comparison between the performance of  three detectors has been carried out
791(Tab.~\ref{tab:Phys-PDK-Summary}).
792For the $e^+ \pi^0$ channel, the Cherenkov detector gets a better limit due to the
793higher mass. However, it should be noted that GLACIER, although five times smaller
794in mass than MEMPHYS,  can reach a limit that is only a factor two smaller.
795Liquid Argon TPCs and liquid scintillator detectors obtain better results for the
796$\bar{\nu} K^+$ channel, due to their higher detection efficiency.
797The techniques look therefore quite complementary.
798We have also seen that GLACIER does not necessarily requires very deep underground
799laboratories, like those currently existing or future planned sites, in order to perform high
800sensitivity nucleon decay searches.
801
802\begin{table}
803\caption{\label{tab:Phys-PDK-Summary}Summary of the $e^+\pi^0$ and $\bar{\nu}K^+$ decay
804discovery potential for the three detectors.
805The $e^+\pi^0$ channel is not yet simulated for LENA.}
806\begin{indented}
807\item[]\begin{tabular}{@{}llll}\br
808                                                & GLACIER             &      LENA              &  MEMPHYS \\ \mr
809$e^+\pi^0$      &                     &                        &          \\
810$\epsilon (\%)
811/ \mathrm{Bkgd (Mton~year)}$ & $45/1$  &         -               &   $43/2.25$ \\
812$\tau_p/B$ (90\% C.L., 10~years) &      $0.4\times 10^{35}$ & -           &  $1.0\times 10^{35}$ \\ \mr
813
814$\bar{\nu}K^+$                    &                         &              \\
815$\epsilon (\%)
816/ \mathrm{Bkgd (Mton~ year)}$ & $97/1$  &         $65/1$               &   $8.8/3$ \\
817$\tau_p/B$ (90\% C.L., 10~years) &      $0.6\times 10^{35}$ & $0.4\times 10^{35}$            &  $0.2\times 10^{35}$ \\
818 \br
819\end{tabular}
820\end{indented}
821\end{table}
822
823%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
824\section{Supernova neutrinos}
825\label{sec:SN}
826
827The detection of supernova (SN) neutrinos represents one of the next
828frontiers of neutrino physics and astrophysics. It will provide invaluable
829information on the astrophysics of the core-collapse explosion
830phenomenon and on the neutrino mixing parameters. In particular,
831neutrino flavor transitions in the SN envelope might be sensitive
832to the value of $\theta_{13}$ and to the type of mass hierarchy.
833These two main issues are discussed in detail in the following Sections.
834
835%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
836\subsection{SN neutrino emission, oscillation and detection}
837%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
838
839A core-collapse supernova marks the evolutionary end of a massive star
840($M\gtrsim 8\,M_\odot$) which becomes inevitably unstable at the end
841of its life. The star collapses and ejects its outer mantle in a shock-wave
842driven explosion.  The collapse to a neutron star ($M \simeq M_\odot
843$, $R\simeq 10$~km) liberates a gravitational binding energy of
844$\approx 3 \times10^{53}~{\rm erg} $, 99\% of which is transferred to
845(anti) neutrinos of all the flavors and only 1\% to the
846kinetic energy of the explosion. Therefore, a core-collapse SN
847represents one of the most powerful sources of (anti) neutrinos in the Universe.
848In general, numerical simulations of SN explosions provide the
849original neutrino spectra in energy and time $F^0_{\nu}$. Such initial
850distributions are in general modified by flavor transitions in the SN
851envelope, in vacuum (and eventually in Earth matter): $F^0_\nu {\longrightarrow} F_\nu$
852and must be convoluted with the differential interaction cross-section
853$\sigma_e$ for electron or positron production, as well as with the
854detector resolution function $R_e$ and the efficiency $\varepsilon$,
855in order to finally get observable event rates $N_e = F_\nu \otimes \sigma_e \otimes R_e \otimes \varepsilon $.
856
857Regarding the initial neutrino distributions $F^0_{\nu}$, a SN
858collapsing core is roughly a black-body source of thermal neutrinos,
859emitted on a timescale of $\sim 10$~s.  Energy spectra parametrizations
860are typically cast in the form of quasi-thermal distributions, with
861typical average energies: $ \langle E_{\nu_e} \rangle= 9-12$~MeV,
862$\langle E_{\bar{\nu}_e} \rangle= 14-17$~MeV, $\langle E_{\nu_x}
863\rangle= 18-22$~MeV, where $\nu_x$ indicates any non-electron flavor.
864
865The oscillated neutrino fluxes arriving on Earth may be
866written in terms of the energy-dependent  survival probability
867 $p$ ($\bar{p}$) for neutrinos (antineutrinos) as \cite{Dighe:1999bi}
868
869\begin{eqnarray}
870F_{\nu_e} & = & p F_{\nu_e}^0 + (1-p) F_{\nu_x}^\nonumber \\ 
871F_{\bar\nu_e} & =  &\bar{p} F_{\bar\nu_e}^0 + (1-\bar{p}) F_{\nu_x}^0 \label{eqfluxes1-3} \\
8724 F_{\nu_x} & = & (1-p) F_{\nu_e}^0 + (1-\bar{p}) F_{\bar\nu_e}^0 +
873(2 + p + \bar{p}) F_{\nu_x}^0 \nonumber
874\end{eqnarray}
875
876where $\nu_x$ stands for either $\nu_\mu$ or $\nu_\tau$.  The
877probabilities $p$ and $\bar{p}$ crucially depend on the neutrino mass
878hierarchy and on the unknown value of the mixing angle $\theta_{13}$
879as shown in \refTab{tab:Phys-SN-Flux}.
880
881\begin{table}
882                \caption{\label{tab:Phys-SN-Flux}Values of the $p$ and $\bar{p}$ parameters used in
883 Eq.~\ref{eqfluxes1-3} in different scenario of mass hierarchy and  $\sin^2 \theta_{13}$.}
884\begin{indented}
885\item[]\begin{tabular}{@{}llll} \br
886                Mass Hierarchy        & $\sin^2\theta_{13}$ & $p$     & $\bar{p}$ \\ \mr
887                Normal                & $\gtrsim 10^{-3}$              & 0        & $\cos^2 \theta_{12}$ \\ 
888                Inverted                          & $\gtrsim 10^{-3}$              & $\sin^2 \theta_{12}$ & 0 \\
889                Any                   &  $\lesssim 10^{-5}$             & $\sin^2 \theta_{12}$ & $\cos^2 \theta_{12}$ \\
890\br
891                \end{tabular}
892\end{indented}
893\end{table}
894%
895Galactic core-collapse supernovae are rare, perhaps a few per century.
896Up to now, SN neutrinos have been detected only once
897during the SN~1987A explosion in the Large Magellanic Cloud in 1987 ($d=50$~kpc).
898Due to the relatively small masses of the detectors operational at that time,  only few events were detected:
89911 in Kamiokande \cite{Hirata:1987hu,Hirata:1988ad} and 8 in IMB \cite{Aglietta:1987we,Bionta:1987qt}.
900The  three proposed large-volume neutrino observatories can guarantee continuous exposure for
901several decades, so that  a high-statistics SN neutrino signal could be eventually observed.
902The expected number of events for GLACIER, LENA and MEMPHYS
903are reported in \refTab{tab:Phys-SN-DetectorRates} for a typical galactic SN distance
904of $10$~kpc.
905The total number of events is shown in the upper panel, while the lower part refers to the $\nu_e$ signal detected
906during the prompt neutronization burst, with a duration of $\sim 25$~ms, just after the core bounce.
907
908%\begin{sidewaystable}
909\begin{table}
910                \caption{\label{tab:Phys-SN-DetectorRates} Summary of the expected neutrino interaction
911rates in the different detectors for a typical SN.
912%$8 M_\odot$ SN located at 10~kpc (Galactic center). A. Mirizzi 15may07
913The following notations have been used: CC, NC, IBD, $e$ES and pES stand for Charged Current, Neutral Current, Inverse Beta Decay,
914electron and proton Elastic Scattering, respectively. The final state nuclei are generally unstable and decay either
915radiatively (notation ${}^*$), or by $\beta^-/\beta^+$ weak interaction (notation ${}^{-,+}$).
916The rates of the different reaction channels are listed, and for LENA they have been obtained by scaling
917the predicted rates from \cite{Cadonati:2000kq, Beacom:2002hs}.}
918%
919%\begin{indented}
920%\item[]
921\lineup
922\begin{tabular}{@{}llllll} \br
923                \multicolumn{2}{@{}c}{MEMPHYS} & \multicolumn{2}{c}{LENA} & \multicolumn{2}{c}{GLACIER} \\ \ns
924                Interaction    & Rates  & Interaction    & Rates  & Interaction    & Rates  \\ \mr
925                $\bar{\nu}_e$ IBD & $2 \times 10^{5}$ &
926                $\bar{\nu}_e$ IBD & $9.0 \times 10^{3}$ &
927                $\nu_e^{CC}({}^{40}Ar,{}^{40}K^*)$ & $2.5 \times 10^{4}$ \\
928%               
929                $\nunubar{e}{}^{CC} ({}^{16}O,X) $ & $1\times10^{4}$ &
930                $\nu_x$ pES  & $7.0 \times 10^{3}$ &
931                $\nu_x^{NC}({}^{40}Ar^{*})$ & $3.0 \times 10^{4}$ \\             
932%               
933                $\nu_x$ $e$ES  & $1\times10^{3}$ &
934                $\nu_x^{NC} ({}^{12}C^{*})$ & $3.0 \times 10^{3}$ &
935                $\nu_x$ $e$ES & $1.0\times10^{3}$ \\
936%
937                & & 
938                $\nu_x$ $e$ES & $6.0\times 10^2$ &
939                $\bar{\nu}_e^{CC}({}^{40}Ar,{}^{40}Cl^*)$ & $5.4 \times 10^2$ \\
940%               
941          &             &
942                $\bar{\nu}_e^{CC} ({}^{12}C,{}^{12}B^{+})$ & $5.0\times10^2$ & &\\
943%               
944                & &
945                $\nu_e^{CC} ({}^{12}C,{}^{12}N^{-})$ & $8.5 \times 10^1$  & & \\
946%
947                \mr
948                \multicolumn{6}{@{}l}{Neutronization Burst rates}\\
949                  MEMPHYS & $\0 60$ & ${\nu}_e$ eES & & & \\
950                    LENA & 
951                    $\0 70$ & $\nu_e$ eES/pES & &  & \\
952%%                  & $\nu_e^{CC} ({}^{12}C,{}^{12}N^{\beta^-})$ & &  & \\
953                   
954                    GLACIER & $380$ & $\nu_x^{NC}({}^{40}Ar^{*})$ & & & \\
955                \br
956                \end{tabular}
957%               \end{indented}
958\end{table}
959%\end{sidewaystable}
960
961The $\bar{\nu}_e$ detection by Inverse Beta Decay (IBD)
962is the golden channel for MEMPHYS and LENA. In addition, the electron neutrino signal can be detected by LENA
963thanks to the interaction on $^{12}$C.  The three charged-current reactions would provide
964information on $\nu_e$ and $\bar{\nu}_{e}$ fluxes and spectra while the three neutral-current processes,
965sensitive to all neutrino flavours, would give information on the total flux.
966GLACIER has also the opportunity to detect $\nu_e$ by charged-current
967interactions on ${}^{40}\rm{Ar}$ with a very low energy threshold.
968The detection complementarity between $\nu_e$ and $\bar{\nu}_e$ is of
969great interest and would assure a unique way of probing the SN explosion
970mechanism as well as assessing intrinsic neutrino properties.  Moreover, the
971huge statistics would allow spectral studies in time and in energy domain.
972
973We wish to stress that it will be difficult to establish SN neutrino
974oscillation effects solely on the basis of a $\bar\nu_e$ or $\nu_e$
975spectral hardening, relative to theoretical expectations. Therefore, in the recent literature the importance of
976model-independent signatures has been emphasized. Here we focus
977mainly on signatures associated to the prompt $\nu_e$
978neutronization burst, the shock-wave propagation and the Earth matter crossing.
979
980The analysis of the time structure of the SN signal during the first few tens of milliseconds
981after the core bounce can provide a clean indication if the full $\nu_e$ burst is present or
982absent, and therefore allows distinguishing between different mixing scenarios, as indicated by the
983third column of \refTab{tab:Phys-SN-SummaryOscNeut}. For example, if the mass
984ordering is normal and $\theta_{13}$ is large, the $\nu_e$ burst
985will fully oscillate into $\nu_x$.  If $\theta_{13}$ turns out to be relatively large
986one could be able to distinguish between normal and inverted neutrino mass hierarchy. 
987
988As discussed above, MEMPHYS is mostly sensitive to the IBD, although
989the $\nu_e$ channel can be measured by the elastic scattering reaction
990$\nu_x+e^-\to e^-+\nu_x$ \cite{Kachelriess:2004ds}. Of course, the
991identification of the neutronization burst is the
992cleanest with a detector exploiting the charged-current absorption of $\nu_e$ neutrinos, such as
993GLACIER.  Using its unique features of measuring $\nu_e$ CC (Charged Current) events it is
994possible to probe oscillation physics during the early stage of the SN explosion, while with NC (Neutral Current) events one can
995decouple the SN
996mechanism from the oscillation physics \cite{Gil-Botella:2004bv,Gil-Botella:2003sz}.
997
998A few seconds after core bounce, the SN shock wave will pass the density region in the stellar envelope relevant for oscillation matter
999effects, causing a transient modification of the survival probability and thus a time-dependent signature in the neutrino signal
1000\cite{Schirato:2002tg,Fogli:2003dw}.  This would produce a characteristic
1001dip when the shock wave passes \cite{Fogli:2004ff}, or a double-dip if a reverse shock occurs \cite{Tomas:2004gr}. The
1002detectability of such a signature has been studied in a large \WC\
1003detector like MEMPHYS by the IBD \cite{Fogli:2004ff}, and in a
1004liquid Argon detector like GLACIER by Argon CC interactions
1005\cite{Barger:2005it}. The shock wave effects would certainly be
1006visible also in a large volume scintillator such as LENA. Such observations
1007would test our theoretical understanding of the core-collapse SN phenomenon, in addition to identifying the actual
1008neutrino mixing scenario.
1009 
1010%The (A. Mirizzi 15may07)
1011Nevertheless, the supernova matter profile need not be smooth. Behind the
1012shock-wave, convection and turbulence can cause significant stochastic density
1013fluctuations which tend to cast a shadow by making other features, such as the shock front,
1014unobservable in the density range covered by the turbulence \cite{Fogli:2006xy,Friedland:2006ta}. The quantitative
1015relevance of this effect remains to be understood.
1016
1017A unambiguous indication of oscillation effects would be the energy-dependent modulation of the survival probability
1018$ p(E)$ caused by Earth matter effects \cite{Lunardini:2001pb}.
1019%These effects can be revealed by wiggles in the energy spectra. (A. Mirizzi 15may07)
1020Under the assumption of a definite mass hierarchy (either normal or inverted), the calculation of neutrino conversion probability in Earth can be reduced to a 2 $\nu$ problem,  so that \refTab{tab:Phys-SN-Flux} and Eq.~\ref{eqfluxes1-3}, one can substitute $\cos^2 \theta_{12} \rightarrow 1-P_E$ and $\sin^2 \theta_{12} \rightarrow P_E$, where $P_E=P(\nu_e \rightarrow \nu_2)$ in the Earth. Analytical expression for $P_E$ can be given for particularly simple (or approximated) situations of Earth matter crossing \cite{PhysRevD.65.073008,PhysRevD.66.039901}. These effects can be revealed by peculiar wiggles in the energy spectra, due
1021to neutrino oscillations in Earth crossing.
1022In this respect, LENA benefits from a better energy resolution than MEMPHYS, which may be partially compensated by
102310 times more statistics
1024\cite{Dighe:2003jg}.  The Earth effect would show up in the $\bar{\nu}_e$ channel for the normal mass hierarchy, assuming
1025that $\theta_{13}$ is large (\refTab{tab:Phys-SN-SummaryOscNeut}). Another possibility to establish the presence of Earth
1026effects is to use the signal from two detectors if one of them sees the SN shadowed by the
1027Earth and the other not. A comparison between the signal normalization in the two detectors might reveal Earth
1028effects \cite{Dighe:2003be}.
1029The probability for observing a Galactic SN shadowed by the Earth as
1030a function of the detector's geographic latitude depends only mildly
1031on details of the Galactic SN distribution \cite{Mirizzi:2006xx}. A location at the
1032North Pole would be optimal with a shadowing probability of about
103360\%, but a far-northern location such as Pyh\"asalmi in Finland, the
1034proposed site for LENA, is almost equivalent (58\%). One particular
1035scenario consists of a large-volume scintillator detector located in
1036Pyh\"asalmi to measure the geo-neutrino flux in a continental
1037location and another detector in Hawaii to measure it in an oceanic
1038location. The probability that only one of them is shadowed exceeds
103950\% whereas the probability that at least one is shadowed is about 80\%.
1040%%A Mirizzi 15may07
1041%%The shock wave propagation can influence the Earth matter effect, producing a delayed effect $5-7$~s after the core-bounce,
1042%%in some particular situations \cite{Lunardini:2003eh} (\refTab{tab:Phys-SN-SummaryOscNeut}).
1043
1044As an important caveat, we mention that very recently it has been recognized that nonlinear oscillation effects caused by
1045neutrino-neutrino interactions can have a dramatic impact on the
1046neutrino flavor evolution for approximately the first 100~km above the
1047neutrino sphere \cite{Duan:2006an,Hannestad:2006nj}.
1048%%A. Mirizzi 15may07
1049%%The impact
1050%%of these novel effects on the observable oscillation signatures has
1051%%not yet been systematically studied.
1052The impact of these novel effects and of their observable signatures  is
1053currently under investigation. However, from recent numerical simulations \cite{Duan:2006an}
1054and analytical studies \cite{Raffelt:2007cb}, it results that the effects of these non-linear
1055effects would produce a spectral  swap $\nu_e \bar{\nu}_e \leftarrow \nu_x \bar{\nu}_x$
1056at $r \lesssim 400$~km, for inverted neutrino mass hierarchy.
1057%In particular, for $\bar{\nu}$ A. Mirizzi 15may07
1058%One would observe a complete spectral swapping, while $\nu$ spectra would show a
1059%peculiar bimodal split. A. Mirizzi 4july07
1060An would observe a complete spectral
1061swapping in the $\bar{\nu}$ fluxes, while $\nu$ spectra would show a peculiar
1062stepwise  splitting.
1063These effect would appear also for
1064astonishingly small values of $\theta_{13}$.
1065These new results suggests once more that one needs complementary detection
1066techniques to be sensitive to both neutrino and anti neutrino channels.
1067
1068Other interesting ideas have been studied in the literature, as the pointing of a SN by neutrinos \cite{Tomas:2003xn},
1069determining its distance from the deleptonization burst that
1070plays the role of a standard candle \cite{Kachelriess:2004ds},
1071an early alert for an SN observatory exploiting the neutrino
1072signal \cite{Antonioli:2004zb}, and the detection of neutrinos from
1073the last phases of a
1074%burning star A.Mirizzi 15may07
1075presupernova star \cite{Odrzywolek:2003vn}.
1076
1077So far, we have investigated SN in our Galaxy, but the calculated
1078rate of supernova explosions within a distance of 10~Mpc is about 1/year.
1079Although the number of events from a single explosion at
1080such large distances would be small, the signal could be separated from the background with the condition to observe at least
1081two events within a time window comparable to the neutrino emission time-scale ($\sim 10$~sec), together with the full
1082energy and time distribution of the events \cite{Ando:2005ka}. In the MEMPHYS detector, with at least
1083two neutrinos observed, a SN could be identified without optical confirmation, so that the start of the light curve could be
1084forecast by a few hours, along with a short list of probable host
1085galaxies. This would also allow the detection of supernovae which are either heavily obscured by dust or are optically
1086faint due to prompt black hole formation.
1087
1088%
1089\begin{table}
1090                \caption{\label{tab:Phys-SN-SummaryOscNeut}Summary
1091 of the effect of the neutrino properties on $\nu_e$ and $\bar{\nu}_e$ signals.}
1092%
1093                \begin{tabular}{@{}lllll}\br
1094                \parbox[b]{2cm}{Mass\\ Hierarchy}   & $\sin^2\theta_{13}$ & \parbox[b]{3cm}{$\nu_e$ neutronization\\peak} & Shock wave & Earth effect
1095                \\
1096%               \\[2mm]
1097                \mr
1098%A Mirizzi 15may07
1099%%              Normal    & $\gtrsim 10^{-3}$ & Absent  & $\nu_e$   & $\bar{\nu}_e$; $\nu_e$ delayed \\
1100%%              Inverted    & $\gtrsim 10^{-3}$ & Present  & $\bar{\nu}_e$   & $\nu_e$; $\bar{\nu}_e$ delayed \\
1101%%              Any    & $\lesssim 10^{-5}$ & Present  & -   & both $\bar{\nu}_e$ $\nu_e$ \\
1102                Normal    & $\gtrsim 10^{-3}$ & Absent  & $\nu_e$   & $\bar{\nu}_e$\\
1103                Inverted    & $\gtrsim 10^{-3}$ & Present  & $\bar{\nu}_e$   & $\nu_e$ \\
1104                Any    & $\lesssim 10^{-5}$ & Present  & -   & both $\bar{\nu}_e$ $\nu_e$ \\
1105                %[2mm]
1106\br
1107                \end{tabular}
1108\end{table}
1109%
1110\subsection{Diffuse supernova neutrino background} 
1111
1112As mentioned above, a galactic SN explosion would be a spectacular source of neutrinos,
1113so that a variety of neutrino and SN properties could be
1114assessed.  However, only one such explosion is expected in 20 to 100
1115years by now. 
1116%Alternatively or in addition, A. Mirizzi 15may07
1117Waiting for the next galactic SN, one can detect the cumulative neutrino flux from all the past SN in the Universe,
1118the so-called Diffuse Supernova Neutrino Background (DSNB). In particular, there is an energy window around
1119$10-40$~MeV where the DSNB signal can emerge above other sources, so that the proposed detectors may well
1120measure this flux after some years of exposure.
1121
1122\begin{table}
1123        \caption{\label{tab:Phys-SN-DiffuseRates}DSNB expected
1124        rates. The larger numbers of expected signal events are computed with the present limit
1125        on the flux by the Super-Kamiokande Collaboration. The smaller
1126        numbers are computed for typical models. The background
1127        from reactor plants has been computed for specific sites
1128        for LENA and MEMPHYS. For MEMPHYS, the Super-Kamiokande
1129        background has been scaled by the exposure.}
1130
1131        \begin{tabular}{@{}llll}\br
1132        Interaction & Exposure     &  Energy Window &  Signal/Bkgd \\ \mr 
1133\multicolumn{4}{@{}l}{GLACIER}\\
1134 $\nu_e + {}^{40}Ar \rightarrow e^- + {}^{40}K^*$ &
1135\parbox{2cm}{0.5~Mton~year\\5~years} &
1136$[16-40]$~MeV & (40-60)/30 \\
1137%                       
1138\multicolumn{4}{@{}l}{LENA at Pyh\"asalmi} \\
1139\parbox{25mm}{$\bar{\nu}_e + p \rightarrow n + e^+$\\$n+p\rightarrow d+ \gamma$ (2~MeV, $200~\mu$s)} &
1140\parbox{2cm}{0.4~Mton~year\\10~years} & 
1141$[9.5-30]$~MeV & (20-230)/8 \\
1142%
1143\multicolumn{4}{@{}l}{1 MEMPHYS module + 0.2\% Gd (with bkgd at Kamioka)} \\
1144\parbox{3cm}{$\bar{\nu}_e + p \rightarrow n + e^+$\\$n+Gd\rightarrow \gamma$\\(8~MeV, $20~\mu$s)} &
1145\parbox{2cm}{0.7~Mton~year\\5~years} & 
1146$[15-30]$~MeV & (43-109)/47 \\
1147%
1148\br
1149                \end{tabular}
1150\end{table}
1151 
1152The DSNB signal, although weak, is not only  guaranteed, but can also allow
1153probing physics different from that of a galactic SN, including
1154processes which occur on cosmological scales in time or space.
1155For instance, the DSNB signal is sensitive to the evolution of the SN
1156rate, which in turn is closely related to the star formation rate
1157\cite{Fukugita:2002qw,Ando:2004sb}. In addition, neutrino decay
1158scenarios with cosmological lifetimes could be analyzed and
1159constrained \cite{Ando:2003ie} as proposed in \cite{Fogli:2004gy}.
1160An upper limit on the DSNB flux has been set by the Super-Kamiokande
1161experiment \cite{Malek:2002ns}
1162
1163\begin{equation}
1164        \phi_{\bar{\nu}_e}^{\mathrm{DSNB}} < 1.2~ \flux (E_\nu > 19.3~\mathrm{MeV}).
1165\end{equation}
1166
1167An upper limit based on the non observation of distortions of the expected
1168 background spectra in the same energy range. The most recent
1169 theoretical estimates  (see for example \cite{Strigari:2005hu,Hopkins:2006bw})  predict a DSNB flux very close to the SK upper limit,
1170 suggesting that the DSNB is on the verge of the detection if a
1171 significant background reduction is achieved such as Gd loading \cite{Beacom:2003nk}
1172 With a careful reduction of backgrounds, the proposed large detectors would
1173 not only be able to detect the DSNB, but to study its spectral
1174 properties with some precision.  In particular, MEMPHYS and LENA would be sensitive
1175 mostly to the $\bar{\nu}_e$ component of DSNB,  through $\bar{\nu}_e$ IBD,
1176 while GLACIER would probe  $\nu_e$ flux, trough   $\nu_e + {}^{40}Ar     
1177\rightarrow e^-  + {}^{40}K^*$ (and the  associated gamma cascade) \cite{Cocco:2004ac}.
1178
1179\begin{figure}
1180\begin{center}
1181\includegraphics[width=0.7\columnwidth]{Fig8-dsnspec1.eps}
1182\end{center}
1183\caption{DSNB signal and background in the LENA detector in 10 years of exposure. The shaded regions give the uncertainties of all curves. An observational window between $\sim 9.5$ to 25~MeV that is almost free of background can be identified
1184(for the Pyh\"asalmi site). The DSN neutrino rates are shown for different models of core-collapse supernova simulation performed by the Lawrence Livermore (LL) , Keil, Raffelt and Janka (KRJ) and Thompson, Burrows and Pinto (TBP) groups. Reprinted figure with permission from~\cite{Wurm:2007cy}.}
1185\label{fig:Phys-SN-LENAsnr}
1186\end{figure}
1187
1188\begin{figure}
1189\begin{center}
1190\includegraphics[width=0.7\columnwidth]{Fig9-GdSKtemp-expect-bis.eps}
1191\end{center}
1192\caption{Possible 90\% C.L. measurements of the emission parameters
1193of supernova electron antineutrino emission after 5
1194years running of a Gadolinium-enhanced SK detector or 1 year of one Gadolinium-enhanced MEMPHYS tanks.
1195Reprinted figure with permission from~\cite{Yuksel:2005ae}.}
1196\label{fig:Phys-DSN-sndpar}
1197\end{figure}
1198%
1199
1200The DSNB signal energy window is constrained from above by the atmospheric neutrinos and from below by
1201either the nuclear reactor $\bar{\nu}_e$ (I), the spallation production of unstable radionuclei
1202by cosmic-ray muons (II), the decay of "invisible" muons into electrons (III), solar
1203%A Mirizzi suggests a Vth bkgd
1204 $\nu_e$ neutrinos (IV), and low energy atmospheric $\nu_e$ and $\bar{\nu}_e$ neutrinos interactions (V). The three detectors
1205are affected differently by these backgrounds.
1206% A Mirizzi adds bkgd V to Glacier and I,II,V to MEMPHYS 15may07
1207GLACIER looking at $\nu_e$ is mainly affected by types IV and V. MEMPHYS filled with pure water is affected by types I, II, V and III due to the
1208fact that the muons may not have enough energy to produce Cherenkov light. As pointed out in \cite{Fogli:2004ff}, with the addition of Gadolinium \cite{Beacom:2003nk} the detection of the captured neutron releasing 8~MeV gamma after
1209$\sim20~\mu$s (10 times faster than in pure water) would give the possibility to reject  the "invisible" muon (type III)
1210as well as the spallation background (type II).
1211LENA taking benefit from the delayed neutron capture in $\bar{\nu}_e + p \rightarrow n + e^+$, is mainly concerned with
1212reactor neutrinos (I), which impose to choose an underground site far from nuclear plants.
1213If LENA was installed at the Center for Underground Physics in Pyh\"asalmi (CUPP, Finland),
1214there would be an observational window from $\sim 9.7$ to 25~MeV that is almost free of background. The expected rates of signal and background are presented in \refTab{tab:Phys-SN-DiffuseRates}.
1215According to current DSNB models \cite{Ando:2004sb} that are using
1216different SN simulations (\cite{Totani:1997vj, Thompson:2002mw, Keil:2002in}) for the
1217prediction of the DSNB energy spectrum and flux, the detection of $\sim$10 DSNB events per year is realistic for LENA. Signal rates
1218corresponding to different DSNB models and the background rates due to reactor and atmospheric neutrinos are shown in
1219\refFig{fig:Phys-SN-LENAsnr} for 10 years exposure at CUPP.
1220
1221Apart from the mere detection, spectroscopy of DSNB events in LENA will constrain the parameter space of core-collapse models.
1222If the SN rate signal is known with sufficient precision, the spectral slope of the DSNB can be used to determine
1223the hardness of the initial SN neutrino spectrum. For the currently favoured value of the SN rate, the discrimination between core-collapse models will be possible at 2.6$\sigma$ after 10 years of measuring time \cite{Wurm:2007cy}.
1224In addition, by the analysis of the flux in the energy region from 10
1225to 14~MeV the SN rate for $z<2$ could be constrained with high significance, as in this energy regime the DSNB flux is only weakly dependent on the assumed SN model.
1226The detection of the redshifted DSNB from $z>1$ is limited by the flux of the reactor $\bar\nu_e$ background. In Pyhäsalmi, a lower threshold of 9.5~MeV resuls in a spectral contribution of 25\% DSNB from $z>1$.
1227
1228The analysis of the expected DSNB spectrum that would be observed
1229with a Gadolinium-loaded \WC\ detector has been carried out in \cite{Yuksel:2005ae}.
1230The possible measurements of the parameters (integrated luminosity and average energy) of
1231SN $\bar\nu_e$ emission have been computed for 5 years running of
1232a Gd-enhanced Super-Kamiokande detector, which would correspond to 1 year
1233of one Gd-enhanced MEMPHYS tank. The results are shown in \refFig{fig:Phys-DSN-sndpar}.
1234Even if detailed studies on the characterization of the background are needed, the DSNB events provide the first neutrino detection originating from cosmological distances.
1235%may be
1236%%as powerful as A. Mirizzi 15may07
1237%a complementary source of results
1238%to those made by Kamioka and IMB with SN1987A $\bar\nu_e$ events.
1239
1240%}
1241%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
1242\section{Solar neutrinos}
1243\label{sec:Solar}
1244%
1245In the past years water Cherenkov detectors have measured the high energy tail ($E>5$~MeV)
1246of the solar $^{8}$B neutrino flux using electron-neutrino elastic scattering \cite{Smy:2002rz}.
1247Since such detectors could record the time of an interaction and reconstruct
1248the energy and direction of the recoiling electron, unique information
1249on the spectrum and time variation of the solar neutrino flux were extracted.
1250This provided further insights into the "solar neutrino problem'',
1251the deficit of the neutrino flux (measured by several experiments)
1252with respect to the flux expected by solar models, contributing to the assessment of
1253the oscillation scenario for solar neutrinos \cite{Davis:1968cp,Hirata:1989zj,Anselmann:1992um,Abdurashitov:1994bc,Smy:2002rz,Aharmim:2005gt,Altmann:2005ix} .
1254
1255With MEMPHYS,  Super-Kamiokande's measurements obtained from 1258 days
1256of data taking could be repeated in about half a year, while the seasonal flux variation
1257measurement will obviously require a full year. In particular, the first
1258measurement of the flux of the rare $hep$ neutrinos may be possible.
1259Elastic neutrino-electron scattering is strongly forward peaked.
1260In order to separate the solar neutrino signal from the isotropic background events (mainly due to low radioactivity), this
1261directional correlation is exploited, although the angular resolution is limited
1262by multiple scattering.  The reconstruction algorithms first reconstruct
1263the vertex from the PMT timing information and then the direction, by assuming a single
1264Cherenkov cone originating from the reconstructed vertex.
1265Reconstructing 7~MeV events in MEMPHYS seems not to be a problem, but decreasing this
1266threshold would imply serious consideration of the PMT dark current rate as well as the laboratory and detector radioactivity level.
1267
1268With LENA, a large amount of neutrinos from ${}^{7}$Be (around $\sim5.4\times10^3$/day, $\sim 2.0\times10^6$/year) would be
1269detected. Depending on the signal to background ratio, this could provide a sensitivity to time variations in the $^{7}$Be neutrino
1270flux of $\sim 0.5$\% during one month of measuring time. Such a sensitivity can give unique information on helioseismology
1271(pressure or temperature fluctuations in the center of the Sun) and on a possible magnetic moment interaction
1272with a timely varying solar magnetic field.
1273The {\it pep} neutrinos are expected to be recorded at a
1274rate of $210$/day ($\sim 7.7\times10^4$/y). These events would
1275provide a better understanding of the global solar neutrino
1276luminosity, allowing to probe (due to their peculiar energy)  the
1277transition region of vacuum to matter-dominated neutrino oscillation.
1278
1279The neutrino flux from the CNO cycle is theoretically
1280predicted with a large uncertainty (30\%). Therefore, LENA would provide a new opportunity for a detailed
1281study of solar physics. However, the observation of such solar
1282neutrinos in these detectors, $i.e.$ through elastic scattering, is not
1283a simple task, since neutrino events cannot be separated from the background, and it can be accomplished only if the detector
1284contamination will be kept very low \cite{Alimonti:1998aa,Alimonti:1998nt}. Moreover, only
1285mono-energetic sources as those mentioned can be detected, taking
1286advantage of the Compton-like shoulder edge produced in the event spectrum.
1287
1288Recently, the possibility to detect ${}^8$B solar neutrinos by means of charged-current interaction with the
1289${}^{13}$C \cite{Ianni:2005ki} nuclei naturally contained in organic scintillators has been investigated. Even if signal events do not
1290keep the directionality of the neutrino, they can be separated from background by exploiting the time and space coincidence with the
1291subsequent decay of the produced ${}^{13}$N nuclei. The residual background amounts to about $60$/year
1292corresponding to a reduction factor of
1293$\sim 3 \times10^{-4}$ \cite{Ianni:2005ki}. Around 360~events of this type
1294per year can be estimated for LENA. A deformation due to the MSW matter effect
1295should be observable in the low-energy regime after a couple of years of measurements.
1296
1297%LENA after referee
1298%For the proposed location of LENA in Pyh\"asalmi ($\sim 4000$~m.w.e.),
1299%the cosmogenic background will be sufficiently low for the above mentioned
1300%measurements.
1301For the proposed location of LENA in Pyh\'asalmi ($\sim 4000$~m.w.e.), the  cosmogenic background will produce $^{11}$C which contribute to the CNO and pep neutrino measurements. At the Pyh\"almi site, the signal to background ratio is estimated to be $\sim 1$ \cite{Hagner:2000xb}. Event by event, background rejection can be achieved by registration of the neutron capture which follows $^{11}$C production by spallation processes induced by cosmic muons. This technique has been successfully demonstrated in the Counting Test Facility for Borexino (CTF) \cite{Back:2006vc}.
1302Notice that the Fréjus site would also be adequate for this
1303case ($\sim 4800$~m.w.e.). The radioactivity of the detector would
1304have to be kept very low ($10^{-17}$~g/g level U-Th) as in the KamLAND detector.
1305
1306Solar neutrinos can be detected by GLACIER through the elastic scattering $\nu_x + e^- \rightarrow \nu_x + e^-$ (ES) and the absorption
1307reaction $\nu_e + {}^{40}Ar \rightarrow e^- + {}^{40}K^*$ (ABS) followed by $\gamma$-ray emission.
1308Even if these reactions have low energy threshold ($1.5$~MeV for the second one),
1309one expects to operate in practice with a threshold set at 5~MeV on the primary electron kinetic energy,
1310in order to reject background from neutron capture followed by gamma emission, which constitutes the main background for some
1311of the underground laboratories \cite{Arneodo:2001tx}.
1312These neutrons are induced by the spontaneous fission and ($\alpha$,n)
1313reactions in rock. In the case of a salt mine this background can be smaller.
1314The fact that salt has smaller U/Th concentrations does not necessarily mean that the neutron flux is smaller. The flux depends on the rock
1315composition since (alpha,n) reactions may contribute significantly to the flux.
1316The expected raw event rate is $330\ 000$/year (66\% from ABS, 25\% from ES and 9\% from neutron background induced events)
1317assuming the above mentioned threshold on the final electron energy.
1318By applying further offline cuts to purify separately the ES sample and the ABS sample, one obtains
1319the rates shown on \refTab{tab:GLACIER-Solar}.
1320
1321\begin{table}
1322                \caption{\label{tab:GLACIER-Solar} Number of events expected in GLACIER per year, compared with the computed background (no oscillation) from the Gran Sasso rock radioactivity ($0.32~10^{-6}$~n \flux ($> 2.5$~MeV). The absorption channel has
1323been split into the contributions of events from Fermi and Gamow-Teller transitions of the ${}^{40}$Ar to the different ${}^{40}$K excited levels and that can be separated using the emitted gamma energy and multiplicity.} 
1324\lineup
1325\begin{indented}
1326\item[]\begin{tabular}{@{}ll}\br
1327                                                        & Events/year \\ \mr
1328Elastic channel ($E\geq5$~MeV)                &   $\045\ 300$ \\
1329Neutron background                                                            &   $\0\0\ 1400$ \\
1330Absorption events contamination               & $\0\0\ 1100$ \\ \mr
1331Absorption channel (Gamow-Teller transition)    & $101\ 700$ \\
1332Absorption channel (Fermi transition)           & $\059\ 900$ \\
1333Neutron background                                                            & $\0\0\ 5500$ \\                                         
1334Elastic events contamination                  & $\0\0\ 1700$ \\         
1335                        \br
1336                \end{tabular}
1337                \end{indented}
1338\end{table}
1339
1340A possible way to combine the ES and the ABS channels similar to the NC/CC flux ratio measured by SNO collaboration \cite{Aharmim:2005gt}, is to compute the following ratio
1341
1342\begin{equation}
1343        R = \frac{N^{ES}/N^{ES}_0}{\frac{1}{2}\left( N^{Abs-GT}/N^{Abs-GT}_0 + N^{Abs-F}/N^{Abs-F}_0\right)}
1344\end{equation}
1345
1346where the numbers $N^{ES}$, $N^{Abs-GT}$ and $N^{Abs-F}$ are the measured event rates (elastic, absorption Gamow-Teller transition and absorption pure Fermi transition respectively), and the expected events without neutrino oscillations are labeled with a $0$). This double ratio has two advantages.
1347First, it is independent of the ${}^{8}$B total neutrino flux, predicted by different solar models,
1348and second, it is free from experimental threshold energy bias and of the adopted cross-sections
1349for the different channels.
1350With the present fit to solar neutrino experiments and KamLAND data, one expects a value of $R = 1.30\pm 0.01$ after one
1351year of data taking with GLACIER.  The quoted error for R only takes into account statistics.
1352
1353%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
1354\section{Atmospheric neutrinos}
1355\label{sec:Phys-Atm-neut}
1356%
1357
1358Atmospheric neutrinos originate from the decay chain initiated by the collision of
1359primary cosmic-rays with the upper layers of Earth's atmosphere.
1360The primary cosmic-rays are mainly protons
1361and helium nuclei producing secondary particles such
1362$\pi$ and $K$, which in turn decay producing electron- and muon-
1363neutrinos and antineutrinos.
1364
1365%
1366\begin{figure}
1367\begin{center}
1368    \includegraphics[width=0.7\columnwidth]{Fig10-fig.octant.eps}
1369\end{center}
1370    \caption{ \label{fig:octant} %
1371      Discrimination of the wrong octant solution as a function of
1372      $\sin^2\theta_{23}^\mathrm{true}$, for
1373      $\theta_{13}^\mathrm{true} = 0$. We have assumed 10 years of
1374      data taking with a 440 kton detector. Reprinted figure with permission from~\cite{Campagne:2006yx}.}
1375\end{figure}
1376
1377%
1378At low energies the main contribution comes from $\pi$ mesons, and
1379the decay chain $\pi \to \mu + \nu_\mu$ followed by $\mu \to e + \nu_e
1380+ \nu_\mu$ produces essentially two $\nu_\mu$ for each $\nu_e$.  As
1381the energy increases, more and more muons reach the ground before
1382decaying, and therefore the $\nu_\mu / \nu_e$ ratio increases.
1383%
1384For $E_\nu \gtrsim 1$~GeV the dependence of the total neutrino flux on
1385the neutrino energy is well described by a power law, $d\Phi / dE
1386\propto E^{-\gamma}$ with $\gamma = 3$ for $\nu_\mu$ and $\gamma=3.5$
1387for $\nu_e$, whereas for sub-GeV energies the dependence becomes more
1388complicated because of the effects of the solar wind and of Earth's magnetic field \cite{Gonzalez-Garcia:2002dz}. As for the
1389zenith dependence, for energies larger than a few GeV the neutrino
1390flux is enhanced in the horizontal direction, since pions and muons can travel a longer distance before
1391losing energy in interactions (pions) or reaching the ground (muons),
1392and therefore have more chances to decay producing energetic neutrinos.
1393
1394Historically, the atmospheric neutrino problem originated in the 80's as a discrepancy between the
1395atmospheric neutrino flux measured
1396with different experimental techniques and the expectations. In the last years, a
1397number of detectors had been built, which could detect neutrinos through the observation of the charged lepton produced in charged-current neutrino-nucleon interactions inside the detector material.
1398These detectors could be divided into two classes: \emph{iron calorimeters}, which reconstruct the track or the
1399electromagnetic shower induced by the lepton, and \emph{water Cherenkov}, which measure the Cherenkov light
1400emitted by the lepton as it moved faster
1401than light in water filling the detector volume.
1402%
1403The first iron calorimeters, Frejus \cite{Daum:1994bf} and NUSEX \cite{Aglietta:1988be}, found no discrepancy between the
1404observed flux and the theoretical predictions, whereas the two \WC\ detectors, IMB \cite{Becker-Szendy:1992hq} and
1405Kamiokande \cite{Hirata:1992ku}, observed a clear deficit compared to the predicted $\nu_\mu / \nu_e$ ratio.
1406The problem was finally solved in 1998, when the already mentioned water Cherenkov
1407Super-Kamiokande detector \cite{Fukuda:1998mi} allowed to establish with high
1408statistical accuracy that there was indeed a zenith- and energy-dependent deficit in the muon-neutrino flux with respect to the
1409theoretical predictions, and that this deficit was compatible with the
1410hypothesis of  $\nu_\mu \to \nu_\tau$ oscillations. The independent confirmation of this effect from the calorimeter
1411experiments Soudan-II \cite{Allison:1999ms} and
1412MACRO \cite{Ambrosio:2001je} eliminated the original discrepancy between the
1413two experimental techniques.
1414
1415Despite providing the first solid evidence for neutrino oscillations,
1416atmospheric neutrino experiments suffer from two important limitations.
1417Firstly, the sensitivity of an atmospheric neutrino experiments is
1418strongly limited by the large uncertainties in the knowledge of
1419neutrino fluxes and neutrino-nucleon cross-section. Such uncertainties can be as large as 20\%.
1420Secondly, water Cherenkov detectors do not allow an accurate
1421    reconstruction of the neutrino energy and direction if none of the
1422    two is known a priori. This strongly limits the sensitivity to
1423    $\Delta m^2$, which is very sensitive to the resolution of $L/E$.
1424
1425During its phase-I, Super-Kamiokande has collected 4099 electron-like
1426and 5436 muon-like contained neutrino events \cite{Ashie:2005ik}. With
1427only about one hundred events each, the accelerator experiments K2K \cite{Ahn:2006zz} and
1428MINOS \cite{Tagg:2006sx} already provide a stronger bound on the atmospheric mass-squared difference $\Delta m_{31}^2$. The present
1429value of the mixing angle $\theta_{23}$ is still dominated by Super-Kamiokande data, being statistically the most important factor for
1430such a measurement. However, large improvements are expected from the next
1431generation of long-baseline experiments such as T2K \cite{Itow:2001ee} and
1432NO$\nu$A \cite{Ayres:2004js}, sensitive to the same oscillation parameters as atmospheric neutrino experiments.
1433
1434\begin{figure}
1435\begin{center}
1436    \includegraphics[width=0.7\columnwidth]{Fig11-SPLBBMEMPHYS-fig16.eps}
1437\end{center}
1438    \caption{ \label{fig:hierarchy} %
1439      Sensitivity to the mass hierarchy at $2\sigma$ ($\Delta\chi^2 =
1440      4$) as a function of $\sin^22\theta_{13}^\mathrm{true}$ and
1441      $\delta_\mathrm{CP}^\mathrm{true}$ (left), and the fraction of
1442      true values of $\delta_\mathrm{CP}^\mathrm{true}$ (right). The
1443      solid curves are the sensitivities from the combination of
1444      long-baseline and atmospheric neutrino data, the dashed curves
1445      correspond to long-baseline data only. We have assumed 10 years
1446      of data taking with a 440~kton mass detector. Reprinted figure with permission from~\cite{Campagne:2006yx}.}
1447\end{figure}
1448%
1449
1450\begin{figure}
1451\begin{center}
1452    \includegraphics[width=0.7\columnwidth]{Fig12-theta13.eps}
1453\end{center}
1454    \caption{ \label{fig:theta13} %
1455      Sensitivity to $\sin^22\theta_{13}$ as a function of
1456      $\sin^2\theta_{23}^\mathrm{true}$ for LBL data only (dashed),
1457      and the combination beam and atmospheric neutrino data (solid). In the left and central
1458      panels we restrict the fit of $\theta_{23}$ to the octant
1459      corresponding to $\theta_{23}^\mathrm{true}$ and $\pi/2 -
1460      \theta_{23}^\mathrm{true}$, respectively, whereas the right
1461      panel shows the overall sensitivity taking into account both
1462      octants. We have assumed 8 years of beam and 9 years of atmospheric neutrino data
1463      taking with the T2HK beam and a 1~Mton detector. Reprinted figure with permission from~\cite{huber-2005-71}.}
1464\end{figure}
1465
1466%
1467Despite the above limitations, atmospheric neutrino detectors can still play a leading role in the future of neutrino physics due to the huge range
1468in energy (from 100~MeV to 10~TeV and above) and distance (from 20~km to more than $12\ 000$~km) covered by the data.
1469This unique feature, as well as the very large statistics expected for a detector such as
1470MEMPHYS ($20\div 30$ times the present Super-Kamiokande event rate), will allow a
1471very accurate study of the subdominant modification to the leading
1472oscillation pattern, thus providing complementary information to
1473accelerator-based experiments. More concretely, atmospheric neutrino
1474data will be extremely valuable for
1475%
1476\begin{itemize}
1477  \item Resolving the octant ambiguity. Although future accelerator
1478    experiments are expected to considerably improve the measurement
1479    of the absolute value of the small quantity $D_{23} \equiv
1480    \sin^2\theta_{23} - 1/2$, they will have practically no
1481    sensitivity on its sign.  On the other hands, it has been pointed
1482    out \cite{Kim:1998bv,Peres:1999yi} that the $\nu_\mu \to \nu_e$ conversion
1483    signal induced by the small but finite value of $\Delta m_{21}^2$
1484    can resolve this degeneracy. However, observing such a conversion
1485    requires a very long baseline and low energy neutrinos, and
1486    atmospheric sub-GeV electron-like events are particularly suitable
1487    for this purpose. In \refFig{fig:octant} we show the potential
1488    of different experiments to exclude the octant degenerate
1489    solution.
1490
1491  \item Resolving the hierarchy degeneracy. If $\theta_{13}$ is not
1492    too small, matter effect will produce resonant conversion in the
1493    $\nu_\mu \leftrightarrow \nu_e$ channel for neutrinos
1494    (antineutrinos) if the mass hierarchy is normal (inverted). The
1495    observation of this enhanced conversion would allow the
1496    determination of the mass hierarchy. Although a magnetized
1497    detector would be the best solution for this task, it is possible
1498    to extract useful information also with a conventional detector
1499    since the event rates expected for atmospheric neutrinos and
1500    antineutrinos are quite different. This is clearly visible from
1501    \refFig{fig:hierarchy}, where we show how the sensitivity to the
1502    mass hierarchy of different beam experiments is drastically
1503    increased when the atmospheric neutrino data collected by the same detector are
1504    also included in the fit.
1505
1506  \item Measuring or improving the bound on $\theta_{13}$. Although
1507    atmospheric data alone are not expected to be competitive with the
1508    next generation of long-baseline experiments in the sensitivity to
1509    $\theta_{13}$, they will contribute indirectly by eliminating the
1510    octant degeneracy, which is an important source of uncertainty for beam experiments.
1511    In particular, if $\theta_{23}^\mathrm{true}$ is larger than
1512    $45^\circ$ then the inclusion of atmospheric data will
1513    considerably improve the accelerator experiment sensitivity to $\theta_{13}$, as can
1514    be seen from the right panel of \refFig{fig:theta13} \cite{huber-2005-71}.
1515\end{itemize}
1516
1517%At energies above 1 GeV, we expect unoscillated events to be
1518%quasi-symmetric with respect to the horizontal plane. In contrast,
1519%in the case of oscillations, we know that $\nu_\tau, \ \bar{\nu}_\tau$ induced events come from
1520%below the horizon (upward going events). Therefore,
1521%the presence of $\nu_\tau$, $\bar{\nu}_\tau$ events can be revealed by a
1522%measured excess of upward going events. Hereafter, we assume that {$\nu_\mu$} and
1523%{$\mathbf \nu_\tau$} are maximally mixed and their mass
1524%squared difference is {$ \Delta m^2 = 3. \times 10^{-3}$} eV{$^2$}.
1525
1526In GLACIER, the search for $\nu_\tau$ appearance is based on the information provided by the event kinematics and takes advantage of the special characteristics of $\nu_\tau$ CC and the subsequent
1527decay of the produced $\tau$ lepton when compared to CC and NC interactions
1528of $\nu_\mu$ and $\nu_e$, i.e. by making use of $\vec{P}_{candidate}$ 
1529and $\vec{P}_{hadron}$.
1530Due to the large background induced by atmospheric muon and electron
1531neutrinos and antineutrinos, the measurement of a statistically
1532significant excess of $\nu_\tau$ 
1533events is very unlikely for the  $\tau \to e$ and  $\tau \to \mu$ decay modes.
1534
1535The situation is much more advantageous for the hadronic channels.
1536One can consider tau-decays to one prong (single pion, $\rho$) and to three
1537prongs ($\pi^\pm \pi^0 \pi^0 $ and three charged pions). In order to select the signal,
1538one can exploit the kinematical variables $E_{visible}$,
1539$y_{bj}$ (the ratio between the total hadronic energy and
1540$E_{visible}$) and $Q_T$ (defined as the transverse momentum of the $\tau$
1541candidate with respect to the total measured momentum) that are not completely independent one from another but show
1542some correlation. These correlations can be exploited to reduce the
1543background. In order to maximize the separation between signal
1544and background, one can use three dimensional likelihood functions
1545${\cal L}(Q_T,E_{visible}, y_{bj})$ where
1546correlations are taken into account. For each channel, three
1547dimensional likelihood functions are built
1548for both signal (${\cal L}^S_\pi, \ {\cal L}^S_\rho, \
1549{\cal L}^S_{3\pi}$) and background (${\cal L}^B_\pi, \ {\cal L}^B_\rho, \
1550{\cal L}^B_{3\pi}$). In order to enhance the separation of $\nu_\tau$ induced
1551events from $\nu_\mu, \ \nu_e$ interactions, the ratio of
1552likelihoods is taken as the sole discriminant variable
1553$\ln \lambda_i \equiv \ln({\cal L}^S_i / {\cal L}^B_i)$ where $i=\pi,\ \rho, \ 3\pi$.
1554
1555To further improve the sensitivity of the $\nu_\tau$ appearance search, one can combine
1556the three independent hadronic analyses into a single one. Events that are common to at least
1557two analyses are counted only once and a survey of all possible combinations, for a restricted set of  values of the likelihood
1558ratios, is performed. Table \ref{tab:combi} illustrates the  statistical significance achieved by several selected combinations of the
1559likelihood ratios for an exposure equivalent to 100 kton year.
1560
1561\begin{table}
1562\caption{\label{tab:combi}Expected GLACIER background and signal events for different
1563combinations of the $\pi$, $\rho$ and $3\pi$ analyses. The considered
1564statistical sample corresponds to an exposure of 100
1565kton year.}
1566\lineup
1567\begin{indented}
1568\item[]\begin{tabular}{@{}lllllll}\br
1569$\ln \lambda_\pi$ & $\ln \lambda_\rho$ & $\ln \lambda_{3\pi}$ & 
1570Top & Bottom & $P_\alpha$ ($\%$) & $P_\beta$ ($\%$) \\
1571Cut & Cut & Cut & Events & Events &  \\ \mr
15720.0 & $\m0.5$ & $\m 0.0$ & $223$ & $223 + 43 = 266$ & $16.9$ & $2 \times 10^{-1}$ ($3.1\sigma$)\\
15731.5 & $\m1.5$ & $\m 0.0$ & $\0 92$ & $\0 92 + 35= 127$ & $\0 9.7$ & $2 \times 10^{-2}$ ($3.7\sigma$)\\
15743.0 & $-1.0$ & $\m 0.0$ & $\0 87$ & $\0 87 + 33 = 120 $ & $10.2$ & $3 \times 10^{-2}$ ($3.6\sigma$)\\
15753.0 & $\m0.5$ & $\m 0.0$ & $\0 25$ & {$\0 25 + 22= 47$} & $\0 6.1$ & {$2 \times 10^{-3}$ $(4.3\sigma)$} \\ 
15763.0 & $\m1.5$ & $\m 0.0$ & $\0 20$ & $\0 20 + 19 = 39$ & $\0 7.3$ & $4 \times 10^{-3}$ ($4.1\sigma$)\\
15773.0 & $\m0.5$ & $-1.0$ & $\0 59$ & $\0 59 + 30 = 89$ & $\0 7.7$ & $9 \times 10^{-3}$ ($3.9\sigma$)\\
15783.0 & $\m0.5$ & $\m 1.0$ & $\0 18$ & $\0 18 + 17 = 35$ & $\0 8.9$ & $1 \times 10^{-2}$ ($3.8\sigma$)\\ \br
1579\end{tabular}
1580\end{indented}
1581\end{table}
1582
1583The best combination for a 100 kton year exposure is achieved for the
1584following set of cuts: {$\ln \lambda_\pi > 3$, $\ln \lambda_\rho > 0.5$} and {$\ln \lambda_{3\pi} > 0$}.
1585The expected number of NC background events amounts to 25 (top)
1586while 25+22 = 47 are expected.
1587%Remove and replace by A. Bueno & Anselmo Meregaglia 16th July 07 but introduced 21th Aug. JEC after resubmission (mail cancelation problem)
1588%%$P_\beta$ is the Poisson probability
1589%%for the measured excess of upward going events to be due to a
1590%%statistical fluctuation as a function of the exposure.
1591We use a suitable discriminant variable to enhance the signal to background ratio of the analyses. After cuts, two sets of events are built: $n_b$ (the number of expected downward going background) and $n_t = n_b + n_s$ (the number of expected upward going events, where $n_s$ is the number of taus). A statistical treatment of the data is performed by building two Poissonian probability density functions:
1592\begin{equation}
1593f_b(r) \equiv \frac{e^{-n_b} n_b^r}{r!}
1594\end{equation}
1595with mean $n_b$ and
1596\begin{equation}
1597f_t(r) \equiv \frac{e^{-n_t} n_t^r}{r!}     
1598\end{equation}
1599with mean $n_t$.
1600The statistical significance of the expected $n_s$ excess is evaluated following two procedures:
1601\begin{itemize}
1602\item The pdf $f_b$ and $f_t$ are integrated over the whole spectrum of possible measured $r$ values and the overlap between the two is computed:
1603$P_\alpha \equiv \int_0^\infty min(f_b(r), \ f_t(r)) dr$.
1604The smaller the overlap integrated probability ($P_\alpha$) the larger the significance of the expected excess.
1605\item We compute the probability $P_\beta
1606\equiv \int_{n_t}^\infty \frac{e^{-n_b} n_b^r}{r!} dr$ that, due to a statistical fluctuation of the unoscillated data, we measure $n_t$ events or more when $n_b$ are expected.
1607\end{itemize} 
1608As a result, an effect larger than $4\sigma$ is obtained for an
1609exposure of 100 kton year (one year of data taking with GLACIER).
1610
1611Last but not least, it is worth noting that atmospheric neutrino fluxes are
1612themselves an important subject of investigation, and in the light of
1613the precise determination of the oscillation parameters provided by
1614long baseline experiments, the atmospheric neutrino data accumulated by
1615the proposed detectors could be used as a direct measurement of the incoming
1616neutrino flux, and therefore as an indirect measurement of the primary cosmic-rays flux.
1617
1618The appearance  of subleading features in the main oscillation pattern can also be
1619    a hint for New Physics. The huge range of energies probed by
1620    atmospheric data will allow to set very strong bounds on
1621    mechanisms which predict deviation from the $1/E$ law behavior. For
1622    example, the bound on non-standard neutrino-matter interactions
1623    and on other types of New Physics (such as violation of the
1624    equivalence principle, or violation of the Lorentz invariance)
1625    which can be derived from present data is already the
1626    strongest which can be put on these
1627    mechanisms \cite{Gonzalez-Garcia:2004wg}.
1628
1629%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
1630\section{Geo-neutrinos}
1631\label{sec:Geo}
1632
1633The total power dissipated from the Earth (heat flow) has been
1634measured with thermal techniques to be $44.2\pm1.0$~TW. Despite this
1635small quoted error, a more recent evaluation of the same data
1636(assuming much lower hydrothermal heat flow near mid-ocean ridges) has
1637led to a lower figure of $31\pm1$~TW.
1638On the basis of studies of
1639chondritic meteorites the calculated radiogenic power is thought to be
164019~TW (about half of the total power), 84\% of which is produced by
1641${}^{238}$U and ${}^{232}$Th decay which in turn produce $\bar{\nu}_e$
1642by beta-decays (geo-neutrinos).
1643It is then of prime importance to measure the
1644$\bar{\nu}_e$ flux coming from the Earth to get geophysical
1645information, with possible applications in the interpretation of the geomagnetism.
1646
1647The KamLAND collaboration has recently reported the first observation
1648of the geo-neutrinos \cite{Araki:2005qa}. The events are identified by
1649the time and distance coincidence between the prompt $e^+$ and the
1650delayed (200~$\mu$s) neutron capture produced by $\bar{\nu}_e + p
1651\rightarrow n + e^+$ and emiting a 2.2~MeV gamma. The energy window
1652to search for the geo-neutrino events is $[1.7,3.4]$~MeV. The lower bound
1653corresponds to the reaction threshold while the upper bound is
1654constrained by nuclear reactor induced background events.
1655The measured rate in the 1~kton liquid scintillator detector located at
1656the Kamioka mine, where the Kamiokande detector was previously installed,
1657is $25^{+19}_{-18}$ for a total background of $127\pm 13$ events.
1658
1659The background is composed by $2/3$ of $\bar{\nu}_e$ events from
1660the nuclear reactors in Japan and Korea.
1661These events have been actually used by KamLAND to confirm and precisely measure the Solar driven
1662neutrino oscillation parameters (see Section \ref{sec:Solar}).
1663The residual $1/3$ of the events originates
1664from neutrons of 7.3~MeV produced in ${}^{13}$C$(\alpha,n){}^{16}$O reactions and captured as in the
1665IBD reaction.
1666The $\alpha$ particles come from the ${}^{210}$Po decays, a ${}^{222}$Rn daughter which is of natural
1667radioactivity origin.  The measured geo-neutrino events can be
1668converted in a rate of $5.1^{+3.9}_{-3.6} \times 10^{-31}$ $\bar{\nu}_e$ per
1669target proton per year corresponding to a mean flux of
1670$5.7 \times 10^{6}\flux$, or this can be transformed into a $99\%$ C.L. upper
1671bound of $1.45 \times 10^{-30}$ $\bar{\nu}_e$ per target proton per year
1672($1.62 \times 10^{7}\flux$ and 60~TW for the radiogenic power).
1673
1674%JEC 4/7/07 propose to cancel this part very weak
1675%In MEMPHYS, one expects 10 times more geo-neutrino events but this would imply to decrease the trigger
1676%threshold to 2~MeV which seems very challenging with respect to the present Super-Kamiokande threshold, set to
1677%4.6~MeV due to high level of raw trigger rate \cite{Fukuda:2002uc}.
1678%This trigger rate is driven by a number of factors as dark current of the
1679%PMTs, $\gamma$s from the rock surrounding the detector, radioactive decay in the PMT glass itself and Radon
1680%contamination in the water.
1681
1682In LENA at CUPP a geo-neutrino rate of
1683roughly 1000/year~\cite{Hochmuth:2005nh} from the dominant $ \bar\nu_e+p\to
1684e^+ + n $ IBD reaction is expected. The delayed
1685coincidence measurement of the positron and the 2.2 MeV gamma event, following neutron capture on protons in
1686the scintillator provides a very efficient tool to reject background events.
1687The threshold energy of 1.8 MeV allows the measurement of geo-neutrinos
1688from the Uranium and Thorium series, but not from $^{40}$K.
1689A reactor background rate of about 240 events per year for LENA at CUPP in the relevant energy window from 1.8~MeV to
16903.2~MeV has been calculated.
1691This background can be subtracted statistically using the information
1692on the entire reactor neutrino spectrum up to $\simeq$~8 MeV. 
1693
1694As it was shown in KamLAND, a serious background source may come from radio
1695impurities. There the correlated background from the isotope
1696$^{210}$Po is dominating. However, with an enhanced radiopurity of the
1697scintillator, the background can be significantly reduced.
1698Taking the radio purity levels of the Borexino CTF detector
1699at Gran Sasso, where a $^{210}$Po activity
1700of $35\pm12/\rm{m^3 day}$ in PXE has been observed, this background would
1701be reduced by a factor of about 150 compared to KamLAND and would
1702account to less than 10 events per year in the LENA detector. 
1703
1704An additional background that fakes the geo-neutrino signal is due to
1705$^9$Li, which is produced by cosmic-muons in spallation reactions with
1706$^{12}$C and decays in a $\beta$-neutron cascade. 
1707Only a small part of the $^9$Li decays falls into the energy window which is relevant
1708for geo-neutrinos. KamLAND estimates this background to be $0.30 \pm
17090.05$ \cite{Araki:2005qa}.
1710
1711At CUPP the muon reaction rate would be
1712reduced by a factor $\simeq 10$ due to better shielding and this
1713background rate should be at the negligible level of $\simeq$~1 event per year in LENA.
1714From these considerations it follows that LENA would be a very capable
1715detector for measuring geo-neutrinos.  Different Earth models could
1716be tested with great significance. The sensitivity of LENA for probing
1717the unorthodox idea of a geo-reactor in the Earth's core was estimated,
1718too. At the CUPP underground laboratory the neutrino
1719background with energies up to $\simeq 8$~MeV due to nuclear power
1720plants was calculated to be around 2200 events per year.  A
17212~TW geo-reactor in the Earth's core would contribute 420 events per
1722year and could be identified at a statistical level of better than
1723$3\sigma$ after only one year of measurement.
1724
1725Finally, in GLACIER the $\bar{\nu}_e + {}^{40}Ar \rightarrow e^+ + {}^{40}Cl^*$ has a threshold
1726of $~7.5$~MeV, which is too high for geo-neutrino detection.
1727
1728
1729%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
1730\section{Indirect searches for the Dark Matter of the Universe}
1731\label{sec:DM}
1732
1733The Weakly Interacting Massive Particles (WIMPs) that likely
1734constitute the halo of the Milky Way can occasionally interact with massive objects,
1735such as stars or planets. When they scatter off such an object,
1736they can potentially lose enough energy that they become gravitationally bound and
1737eventually will settle in the center of the celestial body. In
1738particular, WIMPs can be captured by and accumulate in the core of the Sun.
1739
1740%
1741\begin{figure}
1742\begin{center}
1743\includegraphics[width=0.7\columnwidth]{Fig13-wimp_senal_fondo_10gev.eps}
1744\end{center}
1745\caption{\label{fig:GLACIERdm1} 
1746Expected number of signal and background events as a function of the
1747 WIMP elastic scattering production cross-section in the Sun, with a cut
1748of 10 GeV on the minimum neutrino energy. Reprinted figure with permission from~\cite{Bueno:2004dv}.} 
1749\end{figure}
1750
1751
1752\begin{figure}
1753\begin{center}
1754\includegraphics[width=0.7\columnwidth]{Fig14-jasp_dislimit_10gev.eps}
1755\end{center}
1756\caption{\label{fig:GLACIERdm2} Minimum number of years required to claim a discovery WIMP signal
1757 from the Sun in a 100~kton LAr detector as function of $\sigma_{\rm{elastic}}$
1758 for three values of the WIMP mass. Reprinted figure with permission from~\cite{Bueno:2004dv}.}
1759\end{figure}
1760%
1761
1762As far as the next generation of large underground observatories is concerned, although not specifically dedicated to the
1763search for WIMP particles, one could discuss the capability of GLACIER in identifying,
1764in a model-independent way,
1765neutrino signatures coming from the products of WIMP annihilations in the core
1766of the Sun \cite{Bueno:2004dv}.
1767
1768Signal events will consist of energetic electron- (anti)neutrinos coming from the decay
1769of $\tau$ leptons and $b$ quarks produced in WIMP annihilation in
1770the core of the Sun. Background contamination from atmospheric neutrinos is expected to be low.
1771One cannot consider the possibility of observing neutrinos from WIMPs accumulated in the Earth.
1772Given the smaller mass of the Earth and the fact that only scalar interactions contribute,
1773the capture rates for our planet are not enough to produce a statistically
1774significant signal in GLACIER.
1775
1776The search method takes advantage of the excellent angular reconstruction and
1777superb electron identification capabilities GLACIER offers in looking for an excess of
1778energetic electron- (anti)neutrinos pointing in the direction of the
1779Sun. The expected signal and background event rates have been evaluated, as said above in
1780a model independent way, as a function of the WIMP elastic scattering cross-section for a range of masses up to 100~GeV.
1781The detector discovery potential, namely the number of years needed to
1782claim a WIMP signal has been discovered, is shown in Figs.~\ref{fig:GLACIERdm1} 
1783and \ref{fig:GLACIERdm2}. With the assumed set-up and thanks to the low background environment
1784provided by the LAr TPC, a clear WIMP signal would be detected
1785provided the elastic scattering cross-section in the Sun is above $\sim 10^{-4}$~pb.
1786
1787
1788%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
1789\section{Neutrinos from nuclear reactors}
1790\label{sec:Reactor}
1791
1792The KamLAND 1~kton liquid scintillator detector located at Kamioka measured the neutrino flux from 53 power reactors corresponding to
1793701~Joule/cm${}^{2}$ \cite{Araki:2004mb}. An event rate of $365.2\pm23.7$ above 2.6~MeV for an
1794exposure of 766~ton year from the
1795nuclear reactors was expected. The observed rate was 258 events
1796with a total background of $17.8\pm7.3$. The significant deficit combined with the solar experiment results,
1797interpreted in terms of neutrino oscillations, enables a measurement
1798of $\theta_{12}$, the neutrino 1-2 family mixing angle
1799($\sin^2\theta_{12} = 0.31^{+0.02}_{-0.03}$) as well as the mass
1800squared difference $\Delta m^2_{12} = (7.9\pm0.3)~\times 10^{-5}$eV${}^2$.
1801
1802Future precision measurements are currently being investigated. Running KamLAND
1803for 2-3 more years would gain 30\% (4\%) reduction in the spread of
1804$\Delta m^2_{12}$ ($\theta_{12}$). Although it has been shown in Sections \ref{sec:SN} and \ref{sec:Geo}
1805that $\bar{\nu}_e$ originated from nuclear reactors can be a serious
1806background for diffuse supernova neutrino and geo-neutrino detection,
1807the Fréjus site can take benefit of the nuclear reactors located in
1808the Rh\^one valley to measure $\Delta m_{21}^2$ and $\sin^2\theta_{12}$.
1809In fact, approximately 67\% of the total reactor
1810$\bar{\nu}_e$ flux at Fréjus originates from four nuclear power plants
1811in the Rhone valley, located at distances between 115~km and 160~km.
1812The indicated baselines are particularly suitable for
1813the study of the $\bar{\nu}_e$ oscillations driven by $\Delta m_{21}^2$.
1814The authors of \cite{Petcov:2006gy} have investigated the possibility of using
1815one module of MEMPHYS (147~kton fiducial mass)
1816doped with Gadolinium or the LENA detector, updating the previous work of \cite{Choubey:2004bf}.
1817Above 3~MeV (2.6~MeV) the event rate is $59\ 980$ ($16\ 670$) events/year for
1818MEMPHYS (LENA), which is 2 orders of magnitude larger than the
1819KamLAND event rate. 
1820 
1821\begin{figure}
1822\begin{center}
1823\includegraphics[width=0.7\columnwidth]{Fig15-LENAMEMPHYS-reac-histogram.eps}
1824\end{center}
1825%
1826  \caption{The ratio of the event spectra in positron energy
1827  in the case of oscillations with $\Delta m_{21}^2 = 7.9\times 10^{-5}$~eV$^2$ and
1828  $\sin^2\theta_{12} = 0.30$ and in the absence of oscillations,
1829  determined using one year data of MEMPHYS-Gd and LENA located at Frejus.
1830  The error bars correspond to $1\sigma$ statistical error. Reprinted figure with permission from~\cite{Petcov:2006gy}.}
1831
1832\label{fig:LENAMEMPHYS-reac-histo}
1833\end{figure}
1834
1835In order to test the sensitivity of the experiments, the prompt energy
1836spectrum is subdivided into 20 bins between 3~MeV
1837and 12~MeV for MEMPHYS-Gd and Super-Kamiokande-Gd, and into 25 bins between 2.6~MeV and
183810~MeV for LENA (\refFig{fig:LENAMEMPHYS-reac-histo}).
1839A $\chi^2$ analysis taking into account the statistical and systematical errors shows that each of the two
1840detectors, MEMPHYS-Gd and LENA if placed at Fréjus, can be exploited to yield a
1841precise determination of the solar neutrino oscillation
1842parameters $\Delta m_{21}^2$ and $\sin^2\theta_{12}$.  Within one year, the
18433$\sigma$ uncertainties on $\Delta m_{21}^2$ and $\sin^2\theta_{12}$ can be
1844reduced respectively to less than 3\% and to approximately 20\% (\refFig{fig:reactor-sensitivities}).
1845In comparison, the Gadolinium doped Super-Kamiokande detector that might be envisaged in a near future would reach
1846a similar precision only with a much longer data taking time.
1847Several years of reactor $\bar{\nu}_e$ data collected by
1848MEMPHYS-Gd or LENA would allow a determination
1849of $\Delta m_{21}^2$ and $\sin^2\theta_{12}$ with
1850uncertainties of approximately 1\% and 10\% at 3$\sigma$, respectively.
1851
1852%
1853\begin{figure}
1854\begin{center}
1855\includegraphics[width=0.7\columnwidth]{Fig16-memphys-sk-sol-lena.eps}
1856\end{center}
1857%
1858  \caption{Accuracy of the determination of $\Delta m_{21}^2$ and
1859  $\sin^2\theta_{12}$, for one year data taking
1860  of MEMPHYS-Gd and LENA at Frejus, and Super-Kamiokande-Gd,
1861  compared to the current precision from solar neutrino and KamLAND
1862  data. The allowed regions at $3\sigma$ (2 d.o.f.) in the
1863  $\Delta m_{21}^2-\sin^2\theta_{12}$ plane, as well as the projections of the
1864  $\chi^2$ for each parameter are shown. Reprinted figure with permission from ~\cite{Petcov:2006gy}.}
1865
1866\label{fig:reactor-sensitivities}
1867\end{figure}
1868%
1869
1870However, some caveat are worth to be mentioned. The prompt energy trigger of 3~MeV requires a very low PMT dark
1871current rate in the case of the MEMPHYS detector. If the energy threshold is higher,  the parameter precision decreases as can
1872be seen in \refFig{fig:reactor-MEMPHYS-threshold}. The systematic uncertainties are also an
1873important factor in the experiments under consideration, especially the determination of the
1874mixing angle, as those on the energy scale and the overall normalization.
1875
1876Anyhow, the accuracy in the knowledge of the solar neutrino oscillation parameters, which can be
1877obtained in the high statistics experiments considered here, are
1878comparable to those that can be reached for the atmospheric neutrino
1879oscillation parameters $\Delta m_{31}^2$ and $\sin^2\theta_{23}$ with the future
1880long-baseline Super beam experiments such as T2HK or T2KK \cite{Ishitsuka:2005qi} in Japan, or SPL from
1881CERN to MEMPHYS. Hence, such reactor measurements would complete the
1882program of the high precision determination of the leading neutrino
1883oscillation parameters.
1884
1885%
1886\begin{figure}
1887\begin{center}
1888\includegraphics[width=0.7\columnwidth]{Fig17-MEMPHYSGdreactorthreshold.eps}
1889\end{center}
1890%
1891  \caption{The accuracy of the determination of $\Delta m_{21}^2$ and
1892  $\sin^2\theta_{12}$, which can be obtained using one year of data
1893  from MEMPHYS-Gd as a function of the prompt energy threshold.}
1894
1895\label{fig:reactor-MEMPHYS-threshold}
1896\end{figure}
1897%
1898
1899%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
1900\section{Neutrinos from particle accelerator beams}
1901\label{sec:oscillation}
1902%
1903Although the main physics goals of the proposed liquid-based detectors will be in the domain
1904of astro-particle physics, it would be economical and also very interesting from the physics point of view,
1905considering their possible use as "far" detectors for the future
1906neutrino facilities planned or under discussion in Europe, also given the large financial investment represented by
1907the detectors.
1908In this Section we review the physics program of the proposed observatories when using different accelerator
1909neutrino beams. The main goals will be pushing the search for a non-zero (although very small) $\theta_{13}$ angle
1910or its measurement in the case of a discovery previously made by one of the planned reactor or accelerator experiments
1911(Double-CHOOZ or T2K); searching for possible leptonic CP violation ($\delCP$);
1912determining the mass hierarchy (the sign of $\Delta m^2_{31}$) and the $\theta_{23}$ octant
1913($\theta_{23}>45^\circ$ or $\theta_{23}<45^\circ$).
1914For this purpose we consider here
1915the potentiality of a liquid Argon detector in an upgraded version of the existing CERN to Gran Sasso (CNGS) neutrino
1916beam, and of the MEMPHYS detector at the Fréjus using a possible new CERN proton driver (SPL) to upgrade to 4 MW the
1917conventional neutrino beams (Super Beams). Another scheme contemplates a pure electron- (anti)neutrino production
1918by radioactive ion decays (Beta Beam). Note that LENA is also a good candidate detector for the latter beam option.
1919Finally, as an ultimate beam facility, one may think of producing very intense neutrino beams by means of
1920muon decays (Neutrino Factory) that may well be detected with a liquid Argon detector such as GLACIER. 
1921
1922The determination of the missing $U_{e3}$ ($\theta_{13}$ ) element of the neutrino mixing matrix is possible via the detection of
1923$\nu_\mu\rightarrow\nu_e$ oscillations at a baseline $L$ and energy $E$ given by the atmospheric neutrino signal,
1924corresponding to a mass squared difference $E/L \sim \Delta m^2\simeq 2.5\times 10^{-3}\ eV^2$.
1925The current layout of the CNGS beam from CERN to the Gran Sasso Laboratory has been optimized for a
1926$\tau$-neutrino appearance search to be performed by the OPERA experiment \cite{Acquafredda:2006ki}.
1927This beam configuration provides limited sensitivity to the measurement of $U_{e3}$.
1928
1929Therefore,  we discuss the physics potential
1930of an intensity-upgraded and energy-reoptimized CNGS neutrino beam coupled to an off-axis GLACIER
1931detector \cite{Meregaglia:2006du}. This idea is based on the possible upgrade of the
1932CERN PS or on a new machine (PS+) to deliver protons of 50~GeV/c
1933with a power of 200~kW. Post acceleration to SPS energies followed
1934by extraction to the CNGS target region should allow to reach MW power, with neutrino energies peaked around 2 GeV.
1935In order to evaluate the physics potential one assumes five years of
1936running in the neutrino horn polarity plus five additional years in
1937the anti-neutrino mode. A systematic error on the
1938knowledge of the $\nu_e$ component of 5$\%$ is assumed. Given the excellent $\pi^0$
1939particle identification capabilities of GLACIER, the contamination of $\pi^0$ is negligible.
1940
1941\begin{figure}[p]
1942\begin{center}
1943\includegraphics[width=0.7\columnwidth]{Fig18-CNGS_Fraction_th13Disc_NH.eps}
1944\end{center}
1945\caption{\label{fig:fract_disc_theta}
1946GLACIER in the upgraded CNGS beam. Sensitivity to the discovery of $\theta_{13}$:
1947fraction of $\delta_{CP}$ coverage as a function of $\sin^22\theta_{13}$. Reprinted figure with permission from~\cite{Meregaglia:2006du}.}
1948\end{figure}
1949\begin{figure}[p]
1950\begin{center}
1951\includegraphics[width=0.7\columnwidth]{Fig19-CNGS850_1050_Fraction_excMass_NH.eps}
1952\end{center}
1953\caption{\label{fig:fract_disc_dm}
1954Upgraded CNGS beam: mass hierarchy determination for a two detector configuration at
1955baselines of 850~km and 1050~km. Reprinted figure with permission from~\cite{Meregaglia:2006du}.}
1956\end{figure}
1957
1958
1959An off-axis beam search for $\nu_e$ appearance is performed with the
1960GLACIER detector located at 850 km from CERN. For an off-axis angle of
19610.75$^o$$\theta_{13}$ can be discovered for full $\delta_{CP}$ coverage for $\sin^22\theta_{13}>0.004$ at
1962$3\sigma$ (Fig.~\ref{fig:fract_disc_theta}).
1963At this rather modest baseline, the effect of CP violation and matter effects
1964cannot be disentangled. In fact, the determination of the mass hierarchy
1965with half-coverage (50$\%$) is reached only for $\sin^22\theta_{13}>0.03$ at
1966$3\sigma$. A longer baseline (1050~km) and a larger off-axis angle
1967(1.5$^o$) would allow the detector to be sensitive to the first minimum and the second
1968maximum of the oscillation. This is the key to resolve the issue of mass
1969hierarchy. With this detector configuration, full coverage
1970for $\delta_{CP}$ to determine the mass
1971hierarchy can be reached for $\sin^22\theta_{13}>0.04$ at
1972$3\sigma$. The sensitivity to mass hierarchy determination can be
1973improved by considering two off-axis detectors: one of 30 kton at 850
1974km and off-axis angle 0.75$^o$, a second one of 70 kton at 1050 km and
19751.5$^0$ off-axis. Full coverage  for $\delta_{CP}$ to determine the mass
1976hierarchy can be reached for $\sin^22\theta_{13}>0.02$ at
1977$3\sigma$ (Fig.~\ref{fig:fract_disc_dm}).
1978This two-detector configuration reaches very similar sensitivities to the ones of the T2KK proposal \cite{Ishitsuka:2005qi}
1979
1980
1981\begin{figure}
1982\begin{center}
1983  \includegraphics[width=0.7\columnwidth]{Fig20-SPLBBMEMPHYS-fig8.eps}
1984\end{center}
1985  \caption{\label{fig:Phys-SPL-atm-params} Allowed regions of $\Delta
1986  m^2_{31}$ and $\sin^2\theta_{23}$ at 99\%~C.L. (2 d.o.f.)  after 5~years
1987  of neutrino data taking for ATM+SPL, T2K phase~I, ATM+T2HK, and the
1988  combination of SPL with 5~years of atmospheric neutrino data in the
1989  MEMPHYS detector. For the true parameter values we use $\Delta
1990  m^2_{31} = 2.2\, (2.6) \times 10^{-3}~\mathrm{eV}^2$ and
1991  $\sin^2\theta_{23} = 0.5 \, (0.37)$ for the test point 1 (2), and
1992  $\theta_{13} = 0$ and the solar parameters as: $\Delta m^2_{21} = 7.9 \times 10^{-5}~\mathrm{eV}^2$,
1993  $\sin^2\theta_{12} = 0.3$. The shaded region corresponds to the
1994  99\%~C.L. region from present SK and K2K data~\cite{Maltoni:2004ei}. Reprinted figure with permission from~\cite{Campagne:2006yx}.}
1995\end{figure}
1996
1997Another notable possibility is the CERN-SPL Super Beam project. 
1998It is a conventional neutrino beam featuring a 4 MW SPL (Super-conducting Proton Linac) \cite{Gerigk:2006qi}
1999driver delivering protons onto a liquid Mercury target to generate
2000an intense $\pi^+$ ($\pi^-$) beam with small contamination of kaons.
2001The use of near and far detectors will allow both $\nu_{\mu}$ disappearance and
2002 $\nu_{\mu} \rightarrow \nu_e$ appearance studies.
2003The physics potential of the SPL Super Beam with MEMPHYS has been extensively studied \cite{Campagne:2006yx,Baldini:2006fi,ISS06}. However, the beam simulations will need some retuning after the forthcoming results of the CERN HARP
2004experiment \cite{Catanesi:2001gi} on hadro-production.
2005 
2006After 5 years exposure in $\nu_\mu$ disappearance mode, a $3\sigma$ accuracy of (3-4)\% 
2007can be achieved on $\Delta m^2_{31}$, and an accuracy of 22\% (5\%) on $\sin^2\theta_{23}$ if the true value is $0.5$ (0.37), namely in case of maximal or non-maximal mixing (\refFig{fig:Phys-SPL-atm-params}). The use of atmospheric neutrinos can contribute to solving
2008the octant ambiguity in case of non-maximal mixing as it is shown in \refFig{fig:Phys-SPL-atm-params}. Note however,
2009that thanks to a higher energy beam ($\sim 750$~MeV), the T2HK project\footnote{Here, we  to the project where a
20104 MW proton driver is built at KEK to deliver an intense neutrino beam detected by a large \WC\ detector.} can benefit from a much lower dependence on the Fermi motion to obtain a better energy resolution.
2011
2012In appearance mode (2 years $\nu_\mu$ plus
20138 years \nubarmu), a $3\sigma$ discovery of non-zero $\theta_{13}$, irrespective of the actual true value of $\delCP$, is achieved
2014for $\stheta\gtrsim 4\ 10^{-3}$ ($\thetaot \gtrsim 3.6^\circ$) as shown in \refFig{fig:Phys-SPLBB-th13}. For maximal CP violation
2015($\delCP^\mathrm{true} = \pi/2, \, 3\pi/2$) the same discovery level can be achieved for $\stheta\gtrsim 8\ 10^{-4}$ 
2016($\thetaot \gtrsim 0.8^\circ$). The best sensitivity for testing CP violation ($i.e$ the data cannot be fitted with $\delCP =0$ nor $\delCP=\pi$) is achieved for $\stheta\approx 10^{-3}$ ($\thetaot \approx 0.9^\circ$) as shown in \refFig{fig:Phys-SPLBB-CPV}. The maximum sensitivity is achieved for $\stheta\sim 10^{-2}$ where the CP violation can be established at 3$\sigma$ for 73\% of all the $\delCP^\mathrm{true}$.
2017%
2018\begin{figure}[p]
2019\begin{center}
2020  \includegraphics[width=0.7\columnwidth]{Fig21-SPLBBMEMPHYS-fig9.eps}
2021\end{center}
2022  \caption{$3\sigma$ discovery sensitivity to $\stheta$ for
2023  Beta Beam, SPL, and T2HK as a function of the true value of \delCP\
2024  (left panel) and as a function of the fraction of all possible
2025  values of \delCP\ (right panel). The width of the bands corresponds
2026  to values for the systematical errors between 2\% and 5\%. The
2027  dashed curve corresponds to the Beta Beam sensitivity with the fluxes reduced by a factor 2. Reprinted figure with permission from~\cite{Campagne:2006yx}.\label{fig:Phys-SPLBB-th13}}
2028\end{figure}
2029%
2030\begin{figure}[p]
2031\begin{center}
2032   \includegraphics[width=0.7\columnwidth]{Fig22-SPLBBMEMPHYS-fig11.eps}
2033\end{center}
2034   \caption{CP violation discovery potential for Beta Beam, SPL, and T2HK: For
2035   parameter values inside the ellipse-shaped curves CP conserving
2036   values of $\delCP=0,\pi$\ can be excluded at $3\sigma$ $(\Delta\chi^2>9)$.
2037   The width of the bands corresponds to values for the systematic
2038   errors from 2\% to 5\%. The dashed curve is described in \refFig{fig:Phys-SPLBB-th13}. Reprinted figure with permission from~\cite{Campagne:2006yx}.
2039   \label{fig:Phys-SPLBB-CPV}}
2040\end{figure}
2041
2042Although quite powerful, the proposed SPL Super Beam is a conventional neutrino beam with known limitations due to the low
2043production rate of anti-neutrinos compared to neutrinos which, in addition to a smaller charged-current cross-section,
2044imposes to run 4 times longer in anti-neutrino mode, and implies difficulty to set up an accurate beam simulation, and to
2045design a non-trivial near detector setup mastering the background level. Thus, a new type of neutrino beam, the so-called Beta Beam is being considered.
2046The idea is to generate pure, well collimated and intense \nue  (\nubare) beams by producing, collecting, and accelerating
2047radioactive ions \cite{Zucchelli:2002sa}.
2048The resulting Beta Beam  spectra can be easily computed knowing the beta-decay spectrum of the parent
2049ion and the Lorentz boost factor $\gamma$, and these beams are virtually free from other
2050background flavors. The best ion candidates so far are  $^{18}$Ne  and $^6$He for \nue and \nubare,  respectively.
2051A baseline study for the Beta Beam has been initiated at CERN, and is now going on within the European FP6 design study for EURISOL.
2052
2053The potential of such Beta Beam sent to MEMPHYS has been studied in the context of the baseline scenario, using reference fluxes of $5.8 \times 10^{18}$ \He\ useful decays/year and $2.2 \times10^{18}$ \Ne\  decays/year, corresponding to a
2054reasonable estimate by experts in the field of the ultimately
2055achievable fluxes.  The optimal values is actually $\gamma = 100$
2056for both species, and the corresponding performance have been recently reviewed in \cite{Campagne:2006yx,Baldini:2006fi,ISS06}.
2057
2058In Figs.~\ref{fig:Phys-SPLBB-th13},\ref{fig:Phys-SPLBB-CPV} the results of running a Beta Beam during 10 years (5 years with neutrinos and 5 years with anti-neutrinos) is shown and prove to be far better compared to an SPL Super beam run, especially for maximal CP violation  where a non-zero $\thetaot$ value can be stated at $3\sigma$ for $\stheta\gtrsim 2\ 10^{-4}$ ($\thetaot \gtrsim 0.4^\circ$). Moreover, it is noticeable that the Beta Beam is less affected by systematic errors of the background compared to the SPL Super beam and T2HK.
2059
2060Before combining the two possible CERN beam options, relevant for the proposed European underground observatories,
2061let us consider LENA as potential detector. LENA, with a fiducial volume of $\sim 45$~kton, can as well be used as
2062detector for a low-energy Beta Beam oscillation experiment. In the energy
2063range $0.2-1.2$~GeV, the performed simulations show that muon events are
2064separable from electron events due to their different track
2065lengths in the detector and due to the electron emitted in the muon decay.
2066For high energies, muons travel longer than electrons, as the latter undergo scattering and bremsstrahlung. This results in different
2067distributions of the number of photons and the timing pattern, which can be used to distinguish between the two classes of events. For low energies, muons can be recognized by observing the electron of its
2068succeeding decay after a mean time of 2.2~$\mu$s. By using both criteria, an efficiency of $\sim 90$~\% for muon appearance
2069has been calculated with acceptance of 1~\% electron background. The advantage of using a liquid scintillator detector for such an
2070experiment is the good energy reconstruction of the neutrino beam.
2071However, neutrinos of these energies can produce $\Delta$ resonances
2072which subsequently decay into a nucleon and a pion. In \WC\ detectors,
2073pions with energies under the Cherenkov threshold contribute to the
2074uncertainty of the neutrino energy. In LENA these particles can be
2075detected. The effect of pion production and similar reactions is currently under investigation in order to estimate the actual energy
2076resolution.
2077
2078We also mention a very recent development of the Beta Beam concept \cite{Rubbia:2006pi} 
2079based on a very promising alternative for the
2080production of ions and on the possibility of having monochromatic, single-flavor neutrino beams
2081by using ions decaying through the electron capture process \cite{Bernabeu:2005jh,Sato:2005ma}.
2082In particular, such beams would be suitable to precisely measure neutrino cross-sections in a near detector with the
2083possibility of an energy scan by varying the $\gamma$ value of the ions.
2084Since a Beta Beam uses only a small fraction of the protons available from the
2085SPL, Super and Beta Beams can be run at the same time. The combination of a Super Beam and a Beta Beam
2086offers advantages from the experimental point of view since the
2087same parameters $\theta_{13}$ and $\delta_{CP}$ can be measured in many
2088different ways, using 2 pairs of CP related channels, 2 pairs of T related
2089channels, and 2 pairs of CPT related channels which should all give
2090coherent results. In this way, the estimates of systematic errors,
2091different for each beam, will be experimentally cross-checked.
2092Needless to say, the unoscillated data for a given beam will provide a large
2093sample of events corresponding to the small searched-for signal with the
2094other beam, adding more handles to the understanding of the detector
2095response.
2096
2097The combination of the Beta Beam and the Super Beam
2098will allow to use neutrino modes only: $\nu_\mu$ for SPL and $\nu_e$ for Beta Beam.
2099If CPT symmetry is assumed, all the information can be
2100obtained as $P_{\bar\nu_e\to\bar\nu_\mu} = P_{\nu_\mu\to\nu_e}$ and $P_{\bar\nu_\mu\to\bar\nu_e} = P_{\nu_e\to\nu_\mu}$. We illustrate this synergy in \refFig{fig:Phys-SPLBB-th13-5years}. In this scenario, time consuming anti-neutrino running can be avoided keeping the same physics discovery potential.
2101
2102%
2103\begin{figure}
2104\begin{center}
2105   \includegraphics[width=0.7\columnwidth]{Fig23-SPLBBMEMPHYS-fig14.eps}
2106\end{center}
2107%   
2108   \caption{Discovery potential of a finite value of $\stheta$ at
2109   $3\sigma$ $(\Delta\chi^2>9)$ for 5~years neutrino data from
2110   Beta Beam, SPL, and the combination of Beta Beam + SPL compared to
2111   10~years data from T2HK (2~years neutrinos + 8~years antineutrinos). Reprinted figure with permission from~\cite{Campagne:2006yx}.
2112   \label{fig:Phys-SPLBB-th13-5years}}
2113\end{figure}
2114%
2115
2116One can also combine SPL, Beta Beam and the atmospheric neutrino experiments to reduce the
2117parameter degeneracies which lead to disconnected regions on the multi-dimensional space of oscillation parameters.
2118One can look at \cite{Burguet-Castell:2001ez,Minakata:2001qm,Fogli:1996pv} for the definitions of {\it intrinsic}, {\it hierarchy}, and {\it octant} degeneracies. As we have seen above, atmospheric neutrinos, mainly multi-GeV $e$-like events, are sensitive to the
2119neutrino mass hierarchy if $\theta_{13}$ is sufficiently large due to
2120Earth matter effects, whilst sub-GeV $e$-like events provide sensitivity to the octant of
2121$\theta_{23}$ due to oscillations with $\Delta m^2_{21}$.
2122
2123The result of running during 5 years in neutrino mode for SPL and Beta Beam, adding further the
2124atmospheric neutrino data, is shown in \refFig{fig:Phys-SPLBB-degeneracies_5years} \cite{Campagne:2006yx}.
2125One can appreciate that practically all degeneracies can be eliminated as only the solution with the wrong sign
2126survives with a $\Delta \chi^2 = 3.3$.
2127This last degeneracy can be completely eliminated by using a neutrino running mode combined with anti-neutrino mode and ATM
2128data \cite{Campagne:2006yx}. However, the example shown is a favorable case with $\sin^2\theta_{23}=0.6$ and in general,
2129for $\sin^2\theta_{23}<0.5$, the impact of the atmospheric data is weaker.
2130So, as a generic case, for the CERN-MEMPHYS project, one is left with the four intrinsic degeneracies.
2131However, the important observation in \refFig{fig:Phys-SPLBB-degeneracies_5years} is that
2132degeneracies have only a very small impact on the CP violation discovery, in the sense that if the true solution is CP violating also
2133the fake solutions are located at CP violating values of
2134$\delCP$. Therefore, thanks to the relatively short baseline without matter effect, even if degeneracies
2135affect the precise determination of $\theta_{13}$ and $\delCP$, they
2136have only a small impact on the CP violation discovery potential. Furthermore, one would quote explicitly the four possible sets of parameters with their respective confidential level. It is also clear from the figure that the sign($\Delta
2137m^2_{31}$) degeneracy has practically no effect on the $\theta_{13}$
2138measurement, whereas the octant degeneracy has very little impact on the determination of $\delCP$.
2139%
2140\begin{figure}
2141\begin{center}
2142\includegraphics[width=0.7\columnwidth]{Fig24-SPLBBMEMPHYS-fig7.eps}
2143\end{center}
2144%
2145  \caption{Allowed regions in $\sin^22\theta_{13}$ and
2146  $\delta_{CP}$ for 5~years data (neutrinos only) from Beta Beam,
2147  SPL, and the combination. $\mathrm{H^{tr/wr} (O^{tr/wr})}$ refers to
2148  solutions with the true/wrong mass hierarchy (octant of
2149  $\theta_{23}$). For the colored regions in the left panel also
2150  5~years of atmospheric data are included; the solution with the
2151  wrong hierarchy has $\Delta\chi^2 = 3.3$. The true parameter
2152  values are $\delta_{CP} = -0.85 \pi$, $\sin^22\theta_{13} =
2153  0.03$, $\sin^2\theta_{23} = 0.6$. For the Beta Beam
2154  only analysis (middle panel) an external accuracy of 2\% (3\%) for
2155  $|\Delta m^2_{31}|$ ($\theta_{23}$) has been assumed, whereas for
2156  the left and right panel the default value of 10\% has been used. Reprinted figure with permission from~\cite{Campagne:2006yx}.}
2157\label{fig:Phys-SPLBB-degeneracies_5years}
2158\end{figure}
2159%
2160
2161Some other features of the atmospheric neutrino data are presented in \refSec{sec:Phys-Atm-neut}.
2162In order to fully exploit the possibilities offered by a Neutrino
2163Factory, the detector should be capable of identifying  and measuring all three charged lepton flavors
2164produced in charged-current interactions and of measuring
2165their charges in order to identify the incoming neutrino helicity.
2166The GLACIER concept in its non-magnetized option provides a background-free identification of electron-neutrino charged-current events and a kinematical selection of tau-neutrino charged-current interactions.
2167We can assume that charge discrimination is available for muons reaching an external magnetized-Fe spectrometer.
2168
2169Another interesting and extremely challenging possibility would consist in magnetizing the whole
2170liquid Argon volume \cite{Badertscher:2005te,Ereditato:2005yx}. This set-up would allow the clean classification of events
2171into electrons, right-sign muons, wrong-sign muons and no-lepton categories.
2172In addition, high granularity permits a clean detection of quasi-elastic events, which
2173provide a selection of the neutrino electron helicity by detecting the final state proton,
2174without the need of an electron charge measurement.
2175Table~\ref{tab:rates} summarizes the expected rates for GLACIER and $10^{20}$ muon decays at a neutrino factory with stored muons
2176having an energy of 30 GeV \cite{Bueno:2000fg}$N_{tot}$ is the total number of events and $N_{qe}$ is the number
2177of quasi-elastic events.
2178
2179\begin{table}
2180\caption{\label{tab:rates}Expected events rates for GLACIER in a Neutrino Factory beam,
2181assuming no oscillations and for $10^{20}$ muon decays (E$_\mu$=30 GeV). 
2182$N_{tot}$ is the total number of events and $N_{qe}$ is the number of quasi-elastic events.}
2183\lineup
2184%\begin{tabular}{|cc|c|c|c|c|c|c|}
2185%\begin{tabular}{cccccccc}
2186\begin{tabular}{@{}llllllll}
2187\br
2188\multicolumn{8}{@{}c}{Event rates for various baselines} \\ 
2189%\mr
2190\mr
2191 & & \multicolumn{2}{@{}c}{$L=732$~km} & \multicolumn{2}{c}{$L=2900$~km} & 
2192\multicolumn{2}{@{}c}{$L=7400$~km} \\
2193%\cline{3-8}
2194 & & $N_{tot}$ & $N_{qe}$ & $N_{tot}$ & $N_{qe}$ & $N_{tot}$ & $N_{qe}$ \\
2195 %\mr
2196 & $\numu$ CC & 2260\ 000 & 90\ 400 & 144\ 000 & 5760 & 22\ 700 & 900 \\
2197$\mu^-$ & $\numu$ NC & \phantom{0}673\ 000 & --- &  \phantom{0}41\ 200 & --- & \phantom{0}\ 6800 & ---  \\
2198$10^{20}$ decays & $\anue$ CC &  \phantom{0}871\ 000 & 34\ 800 & \phantom{0}55\ 300 & 2200 & \phantom{0}\ 8750 & 350 \\
2199 & $\anue$ NC & \phantom{0}302\ 000 & ---  & \phantom{0}19\ 900 & ---  &  \phantom{0}\ 3000 & ---  \\ \mr
2200 %\mr
2201 & $\anumu$ CC & 1010\ 000 & 40\ 400 & \phantom{0}63\ 800 & 2550 & 10\ 000 & 400 \\
2202$\mu^+$ & $\anumu$ NC &  \phantom{0}353\ 000 & --- & \phantom{0}22\ 400 & --- &  \phantom{0}\ 3500 & --- \\
2203$10^{20}$ decays & $\nue$ CC &  1970\ 000 & 78\ 800 & 129\ 000 & 5160 & 19\ 800 & 800 \\
2204 & $\nue$ NC &  \phantom{0}579\ 000 & --- & \phantom{0}36\ 700 & --- &  \phantom{0}\ 5800 & --- \\
2205 \br
2206\end{tabular}
2207\end{table}
2208
2209Figure~\ref{fig:t13sensitivity} 
2210shows the expected sensitivity in the measurement of $\theta_{13}$ 
2211for a baseline of  7400 km. The maximal sensitivity to $\theta_{13}$ is achieved for very small
2212background levels, since one is looking in this case for small signals; most of the information is coming from the clean
2213wrong-sign muon class and from quasi-elastic events.  On the other hand,  if its value is not too small, for a
2214measurement of $\theta_{13}$, the signal/background ratio could be not so crucial, and also the other event classes can contribute to this measurement.
2215
2216A Neutrino Factory should aim to over-constrain the oscillation pattern, in order to look for
2217unexpected new physics effects. This can be achieved in global fits of the parameters, where the unitarity of the mixing matrix is
2218not strictly assumed. Using a detector able to identify the $\tau$ lepton production via
2219kinematic means, it is possible to verify the unitarity in
2220$\nu_\mu\to\nu_\tau$ and $\nu_e\to\nu_\tau$ transitions.
2221
2222\begin{figure}
2223\begin{center}
2224\includegraphics[width=0.7\columnwidth]{Fig25-s2_l7400_sensi_t13.eps}
2225\end{center}
2226\caption{\label{fig:t13sensitivity} GLACIER sensitivity to the measurement of $\theta_{13}$. Reprinted figure with permission from~\cite{Bueno:2000fg}.}
2227\end{figure}
2228
2229The study of CP violation in the lepton system probably is the most ambitious goal of  an experiment at a Neutrino Factory.
2230Matter effects can mimic CP violation; however, a multi-parameter fit
2231at the right baseline can allow a simultaneous determination of
2232matter and CP violating parameters. To detect CP violation effects, the most favorable choice of
2233neutrino energy $E_\nu$ and baseline $L$ is in the region of  the first maximum, given by $(L/E_\nu)^{max}\simeq 500$ km/GeV
2234for $|\Delta m^2_{32}|=2.5\times 10^{-3}\rm\ eV^2$ \cite{Bueno:2001jd}.
2235To study oscillations in this region, one has to require that the energy of the "first-maximum'' be smaller than
2236the MSW resonance energy: $2\sqrt{2}G_Fn_eE^{max}_\nu\lesssim\Delta m^2_{32}\cos 2\theta_{13}$.
2237This fixes a limit on the baseline $L_{max} \approx 5000$~km
2238beyond which matter effects spoil the sensitivity.
2239
2240As an example, \refFig{fig:cpsensitivity} shows the sensitivity
2241to the CP violating phase $\delta_{CP}$ for two concrete cases.
2242The events are classified in the five categories previously mentioned,
2243assuming an electron charge confusion of 0.1$\%$. The exclusion
2244regions in the $\Delta m^2_{12} - \delta_{CP}$ plane are determined by fitting the
2245visible energy distributions, provided that the electron detection efficiency is $\sim 20\%$. The excluded regions
2246extend up to values of $|\delta_{CP}|$ close to $\pi$,  even when $\theta_{13}$ is left free.
2247
2248\begin{figure}
2249\begin{center}
2250\includegraphics[width=0.7\columnwidth]{Fig26-CPsensi.eps}
2251\end{center}
2252\caption{\label{fig:cpsensitivity} GLACIER 90\%~C.L. sensitivity on the $CP$-phase $\delta_{CP}$ as a function of
2253$\Delta m^2_{21}$ for the two considered baselines. In contrast to \refFig{fig:Phys-SPLBB-CPV} only the conserving phase  $\delta_{CP}=0$ is considered and the other reference oscillation parameters are
2254$\Delta m^2_{32}=3\times 10^{-3}\ \rm eV^2$,
2255$\sin^2 \theta_{23} = 0.5$,
2256$\sin^2 \theta_{12} = 0.5$ and
2257$\sin^2 2\theta_{13} = 0.05$.
2258The lower curves are made fixing all parameters to the reference values
2259while for the upper curves $\theta_{13}$ is free. Reprinted figure with permission from~\cite{Bueno:2001jd}.}
2260\end{figure}
2261
2262
2263%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
2264\section{Conclusions and outlook}
2265\label{sec:Phys-Summary}
2266
2267In this paper we discuss the importance of outstanding
2268physics phenomena such as the possible instability of matter (proton decay), the production of neutrinos
2269in supernovae, in the Sun and in the interior of the Earth, as well as the recently discovered
2270process of neutrino oscillations, also detectable through artificial neutrinos produced by nuclear reactors and
2271particle accelerators.
2272
2273All the above physics subjects, key issues for particle physics, astro-particle physics, astrophysics and cosmology,
2274call for a new generation of multipurpose, underground observatories based on improved detection techniques.
2275
2276The envisioned detectors must necessarily be very massive (and consequently large) and
2277able to provide very low experimental background.
2278The required signal to noise ratio can only be achieved in underground laboratories suitably shielded against cosmic-rays
2279and environmental radioactivity. Some candidate sites in Europe have been identified and we are progressing
2280in assessing in detail their capabilities.
2281
2282We have identified three different and, to a large extent, complementary technologies capable of meeting the challenge, based
2283on large scale use of liquids for building large-size, volume-instrumented detectors.
2284The three proposed large-mass, liquid-based
2285detectors for future underground observatories for particle physics in Europe (GLACIER, LENA and MEMPHYS),
2286although based on completely different detection techniques
2287(liquid Argon, liquid scintillator and \WC), share a similar, very rich physics program. For some cases of interest their
2288detection properties are quite complementary. 
2289A summary of the scientific case presented in this paper is given for astro-particle physics topics
2290in Table \ref{tab:Phys-potential-summary1}.
2291
2292%
2293\begin{sidewaystable}
2294%\begin{table}
2295\caption{\label{tab:Phys-potential-summary1}
2296Summary of the physics potential of the proposed detectors for astro-particle physics topics.  The (*) stands for the case where
2297Gadolinium salt is added to the water of one of the MEMPHYS shafts.}
2298%
2299\begin{indented}
2300\item[]
2301\begin{tabular}{@{}llll}
2302\br
2303Topics             &       GLACIER            &    {LENA}    &      {MEMPHYS}\\
2304                   &         100~kton                    &      50~kton        & 440~kton \\
2305\mr
2306%
2307\multicolumn{4}{@{}l}{{Proton decay}}  \\ 
2308$e^+\pi^0$ &    $0.5\times 10^{35}$ & ---           &  $1.0\times 10^{35}$ \\
2309$\bar{\nu}K^+$  &       $1.1\times 10^{35}$ & $0.4\times 10^{35}$            &  $0.2\times 10^{35}$ \\
2310
2311\mr
2312
2313%
2314\multicolumn{4}{@{}l}{{SN $\nu$ (10~kpc)}}          \\
2315CC & $2.5\times10^4 (\nue)$ & $9.0\times10^3 (\nubare)$ & $2.0\times10^5 (\nubare)$ \\
2316NC & $3.0\times10^4$ & $3.0\times10^3$ & --- \\
2317ES & $1.0\times10^3 (e)$ & $7.0\times10^3 (p)$ & $1.0\times10^3 (e)$ \\   
2318\mr
2319
2320
2321{DSNB $\nu$}
2322
2323(S/B 5 years) & 40-60/30 & 9-110/7  & 43-109/47 (*) \\
2324
2325\mr
2326
2327%
2328
2329\multicolumn{4}{@{}l}{{Solar $\nu$ (Evts. 1 year)}}  \\ 
2330$^8$B ES      & $ 4.5\times10^4$ & $1.6\times10^4$ & $1.1\times10^5$ \\
2331$^8$B CC     &           ---              & $360$           & ---\\
2332$^7$Be          &            ---             & $2.0\times10^6$ &  ---\\
2333$pep$             &              ---           & $7.7\times10^4$ &    ---\\
2334\mr
2335
2336
2337%
2338{Atmospheric $\nu$}
2339(Evts. 1 year)   &  $1.1\times10^4$                &     ---    &   $4.0\times10^4$ (1-ring only) \\ 
2340\mr
2341
2342%
2343{Geo $\nu$}
2344(Evts. 1 year)   &   below threshold                   &    $\approx 1000$ & need 2~MeV threshold \\
2345\mr
2346
2347%
2348{Reactor $\nu$}
2349(Evts. 1 year))  &  ---                      &    $1.7\times10^4$        &  $6.0\times10^4$ (*) \\
2350\mr
2351
2352%
2353{Dark Matter}
2354(Evts. 10 years)   &  \parbox[t]{4cm}{3 events\\ ($\sigma_{ES}=10^{-4}$,$M>20$~GeV)} & ---   & --- \\
2355\br
2356\end{tabular}
2357\end{indented}
2358%\end{table}
2359\end{sidewaystable}
2360%
2361\ack
2362%\begin{acknowledgments}
2363
2364We wish to warmly acknowledge support from all the various funding agencies.  We wish to thank the EU framework 6 project ILIAS for providing assistance particularly regarding underground site aspects (contract 8R113-CT-2004-506222).
2365
2366%\end{acknowledgments}
2367\newpage
2368\section*{References}
2369\bibliography{campagne}
2370\end{document}
2371
2372
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