Back to Search Start Over

Search for heavy neutrino in $K^{+} \to ��^{+} ��_{H}$ decay

Authors :
Sadovsky, A. S.
Kurshetsov, V. F.
Filin, A. P.
Akimenko, S. A.
Artamonov, A. V.
Blik, A. M.
Brekhovskikh, V. V.
Burtovoy, V. S.
Donskov, S. V.
Inyakin, A. V.
Gorin, A. M.
Khaustov, G. V.
Kholodenko, S. A.
Kolosov, V. N.
Konstantinov, A. S.
Leontiev, V. M.
Lishin, V. A.
Medynsky, M. V.
Mikhailov, Yu. V.
Obraztsov, V. F.
Polyakov, V. A.
Popov, A. V.
Romanovsky, V. I.
Rykalin, V. I.
Samoilenko, V. D.
Semenov, V. K.
Stenyakin, O. V.
Tchikilev, O. G.
Uvarov, V. A.
Yushchenko, O. P.
Duk, V. A.
Filippov, S. N.
Gushchin, E. N.
Khudyakov, A. A.
Kravtsov, V. I.
Kudenko, Yu. G.
Polyarush, A. Yu.
Bychkov, V. N.
Kekelidze, G. D.
Lysan, V. M.
Zalikhanov, B. Zh.
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
arXiv, 2017.

Abstract

A high statistics data sample of the $K^{+}\to��^{+}��_��$ decay was accumulated by the OKA experiment in 2012. The missing mass analysis was performed to search for the decay channel $K^{+}\to��^{+}��_{H}$ with a hypothetic stable heavy neutrino in the final state. The obtained missing mass spectrum does not show peaks which could be attributed to existence of stable heavy neutrinos in the mass range (220 $< m_{��_{H}}<br />11 pages, 10 figures

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........7fcd980ac19de865237e6cd5dcf6d9f1
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.1709.01473