J-PARC Project Newsletter No.80, October 2020 dispatch
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     J-PARC Project Newsletter
                                                   No.80, October 2020
Japan Proton Accelerator Research Complex under operation jointly by 
the High Energy Accelerator Research Organization (KEK) and the Japan 
Atomic Energy Agency (JAEA) 
http://j-parc.jp/index-e.html
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HEADLINES AND CONTENTS
1. [Overview]
RESUMING OPERATION; OVERCOMING COVID-19 AT J-PARC.
2. [Accelerator Division]
MAINTENANCE WORK DURING SUMMER SHUTDOWN.
3. [Particle and Nuclear Physics Division]
   NEW RESULTS FOR A KAON-NUCLEUS BOUND STATE: HINT OF A LAMBDA(1405)-NUCLEUS.
   NEW T2K ANALYSIS RESULTS AT SUMMER CONFERENCE AND COMMISSIONING OF 
 NEW BEAM MONITOR PROTOTYPE.
   STATUS OF THE COHERENT MUON TO ELECTRON TRANSITION. (COMET) 
   STATUS OF THE MUON G-2/ ELECTRIC DIPOLE MOMENT. (EDM) (E34) 
 PROGRAM ADVISORY COMMITTEE MEETING.
4. [Materials and Life Science Division]
  MAINTENANCE WORKS ARE GOING ON.
  PROPOSALS FOR 2020B + 2021A ROUND WERE RECEIVED.
  CONSTRUCTION AND MAINTENANCE WORKS IN PROGRESS WHILE COVID-19 WOES 
  CONTINUE.
5. [Nuclear Transmutation Division]
  MEASUREMENT OF SPECTRAL INTENSITY OF NEUTRONS PRODUCED AT THE 
 TARGET.
6. [Safety Division]
J-PARC SAFETY DAY 2020.
7. [Editorial Note]
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1. [Overview] by Naohito SAITO
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RESUMING OPERATION; OVERCOMING COVID-19 AT J-PARC
     We hope you all are doing well and staying healthy. In Japan, 
the number of positive cases once peaked out around the beginning of 
August, but started to increase gradually over the last month. 
Therefore, we are maintaining the preventive measures against COVID-19 
as described at our special homepage: 
http://j-parc.jp/c/en/j-parc-covid/index.html. As the nature of the 
virus is revealed by many researchers all over the world, we are 
learning about more effective preventive measures at the office and 
at the experimental hall. We trying to reflect those newly learned 
measures onto our daily exercise.
For example, recognizing the 
importance of ventilation and fresh air, all cabins at the Material 
and Life Science Facility are now equipped with air purifiers. 
     Resumption from the summer shutdown was only slightly affected 
by the COVID-19, but we have regretfully announced the delay of the 
user operation of Material and Life Science Experimental Facility 
(MLF) by three weeks, from November 9 to December 1, due to more 
careful execution of the target vessel replacing work. As a result, 
the beamtime of this fiscal year will continue until the very end of 
coming March. Our beamline scientists are communicating with the 
users whose beamtime was assigned to affected period to minimize the 
impact of the delays. 
     While many maintenance works were carried out, we also held the 
open house online for the first time due to the COVID-19 pandemic. 
The online-open house included a live streaming from the experimental 
areas, science talks, and special discussion session with the Mayor of 
Tokai Village, Mr. Osamu YAMADA. The event was broadcast through 
YouTube, and now archived at our homepage: 
http://j-parc.jp/c/OPEN_HOUSE/2020/.
     Mayor Yamada expressed his willingness to openly welcome all 
users from domestic and overseas institutions to Tokai Village. He 
reiterated the importance of open access to the J-PARC site. We have 
agreed to work together to realize open access at the earliest occasion. 
     Regarding the future of J-PARC, two major items of progress have 
been made. One is the Roadmap of our funding agency, the Ministry of 
Education, Culture, Sports, and Science and Technology (MEXT) 
(https://www.mext.go.jp/b_menu/shingi/gijyutu/gijyutu4/toushin/1388523_00001.htm) 
which was established to include our project as one of fifteen important 
projects based on the Master Plan 2020 by Science Council of Japan. 
The roadmap will be the basis of funding in the next decade, and 
we are happy that the importance and the urgency of our project were 
highly recognized by the MEXT. The other is the KEK roadmap, which is 
undergoing revision in communication with relevant communities. The 
interim report was just released worldwide for comments. See details at 
https://kds.kek.jp/event/35643/. The roadmap widely covers wish lists 
of relevant communities, and is the basis of Project Implementation 
Plan (PIP) which will be the prioritized list of projects for future 
funding request from KEK. Therefore, it is the important blueprint 
of our future research programs. Comments are most welcome until 
December 4th. 
     With the refreshed facilities after maintenance, continuously 
improved infection prevention measures, and established future plans, 
we would like to create more excitement together with users from all 
over the world! 
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2. [Accelerator Division] by Michikazu KINSHO
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MAINTENANCE WORK DURING SUMMER SHUTDOWN
     Beam operation was suspended for maintenance during the summer 
shutdown from July to October. Maintenance of the components and 
study of new components were conducted in the accelerator facilities. 
     The linac had been operated stably in these several months. But 
one of the Separated-type Drift Tube Linac (SDTL) cavities had a 
symptom of increasing the radio frequency reflection power in the 
vicinity of the designed operation power. The reason was a dirty 
surface of the cavity. So we cleaned it with dilute sulfuric acid 
dipped cloths. During the inspection in the maintenance, we found a 
failure for the klystron system: slight oil leaks for a capacitor 
bank of klystron power supply. It was replaced with spare and we 
confirmed that the other systems are healthy. 
     The 3 GeV Rapid Cycling Synchrotron (RCS) also had been operated 
stably before summer. Since beam power was increased, high residual 
dose chronically exists in the RCS injection area by the highly 
radio-activated vacuum chambers and magnetic cores due to beam 
scattering by the 1st charge stripping foil. To protect maintenance 
workers, we prepared a stand on which a backup shield can be installed 
during maintenance work in this area. 
     The Main Ring (MR) also had been operated stably before summer. 
We have worked to achieve faster repetition and increased beam 
intensity. Specially, we have tested a new power supply for main 
magnets and installed two additional 2nd harmonic cavities in the beam line. 
     The J-PARC accelerator facilities are scheduled to start beam 
tuning at the linac on October 30. After the tuning and beam study of 
the accelerators (linac and RCS), the user operation of the MLF is 
expected to start in November, and MR beam tuning and beam study will 
be started from December 10. 
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3. [Particle and Nuclear Physics Division] by T. TAKAHASHI and K. OZAWA
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  NEW RESULTS FOR A KAON-NUCLEUS BOUND STATE: HINT OF A LAMBDA(1405)-NUCLEUS 
(Y. ICHIKAWA) 
     Kaonic nucleus is a bound state between anti-kaon and nucleus 
and it attracts wide interest for study of interactions between kaon 
and baryons.
An experiment performed at Hadron Experimental Facility 
of J-PARC shows new results for study of kaonic nucleus. 
     In the past, several experiments studied the simplest kaonic 
nucleus, such as a K-pp system, using measurements of X-rays emitted 
by kaonic atom. However, the depth of the potential is under 
discussion, because both a "shallow" potential (-80 ~ -40 MeV) and a 
"deep" (-200 ~ -150 MeV) potential can reproduce the systematic data 
sample of the kaonic atom X-rays. Therefore, a new experimental 
constraint without kaonic atom data is awaited. 
     Recently, the inclusive missing-mass spectrum of K-p reactions 
on a carbon target is measured by the J-PARC E05 experiment. In this
experiment, both momenta of incoming K- and outgoing protons are
measured accurately and the missing mass is reconstructed. The measured
spectrum is compared with a theoretical calculation by varying the
potential depth between anti-kaon and nucleus. The measured spectrum
shape is best reproduced with the potential depth of -80 MeV,
corresponding to a "shallow" potential. The measured spectrum is
difficult to reproduce with the "deep" potential. Moreover,
a significant event excess regarding the reproduced spectrum is
observed in the deeply bound region (~ 100 MeV). A possible
interpretation is a deeply bound state of a Y: -nucleus system,
where Y: means Lambda(1405) or Sigma(1385). This report will be
published as Progress of Theoretical and Experimental Physics.
(https://academic.oup.com/ptep/advance-article/doi/10.1093/ptep/
ptaa139/5904281?guestAccessKey=c9e2316a-e795-4998-96f3-d1bda4bc3a42)
  NEW T2K ANALYSIS RESULTS AT SUMMER CONFERENCE AND COMMISSIONING OF 
NEW BEAM MONITOR PROTOTYPE (by M. FRIEND, S. CAO and T. MATSUBARA) 
     In the NEUTRINO 2020 conference, T2K released new oscillation 
analysis results with about 30% more v-mode data, corresponding to 
1.97x10^21 (neutrino beam mode) and 1.63x10^21 (antineutrino beam mode) 
protons on target from the accelerator. Significant improvements were 
made in the modeling of neutrino interactions and flux for the analysis. 
A large range of values on the leptonic CP violating phase around +90 deg 
were excluded at the 99.7% (3 sigma) confidence level, which is 
consistent with previous results. Future upgrade programs including 
higher beam power and improved near detectors were also presented. 
     A new Beam Induced Fluorescence (BIF) monitor is under development 
in the T2K primary beamline, where the proton beam profile will be 
measured by detecting fluorescence light produced by proton interactions 
with gas injected into the beam pipe. It allows us to carry out a 
continuous and non-destructive beam profile measurement, which is not 
accessible with the present beam profile monitors. A working prototype 
was installed in the beamline in 2019, and BIF light was successfully 
observed in the neutrino beamline for the first time in early 2020. 
The beam profile measured by the prototype BIF monitor was relatively 
consistent with that measured by neighboring monitors. Analysis of the 
first BIF data is ongoing. 
  Recent Publications
     o First measurement of the charged current anti-muon neutrino double 
differential cross section on a water target without pions in the final 
state, K. Abe et al. 
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.97.012001 
  STATUS OF THE COHERENT MUON TO ELECTRON TRANSITION (COMET) 
(by S. MIHARA) 
     The COMET experiment aims to search for the lepton-flavor 
violating muon reaction, mu-e conversion, with sensitivity better 
than 10^{-14} in Phase I. 
     In the ICHEP 2020 conference H. Nishiguchi reported the status of 
the COMET experiment. He summarized facility and detector 
construction status along with schedule towards the start of the 
experiment. He also explained the proton beam extinction factor study 
at J-PARC, which is thought potentially to limit the experiment 
sensitivity. 
     Facility construction work continued in Summer after the B-Line 
operation in the Hadron Experiment Facility completed in June. 
Main work in the beam line construction is to complete air 
sealing along the proton beam line for COMET (C-Line) with 
strong support by the primary proton beam line group. 
C-Line construction in the Hadron Experiment Hall will be 
completed this year. 
     The collaboration has been intensively working toward integrating 
sub-detector components into a mu-e conversion search detector. 
The Cylindrical Drift Chamber (CDC) and Cylindrical Trigger 
Hodoscope (CTH) will be integrated and installed in a solenoid 
magnet with 1 Tesla magnetic field. Detailed design of cabling 
and piping as well as electronics cooling scheme is in progress. 
     KEK held its open house on September 6th online where KEK COMET 
members attended sessions and explained the physics of Lepton Flavor 
Violation. An introductory video of the COMET facility has been 
created for this purpose; 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z-jiw_-gk0M&t=30s 
  STATUS OF THE MUON G-2/ ELECTRIC DIPOLE MOMENT (EDM) (E34) 
(by T. MIBE) 
     The E34 collaboration prepares for precision measurements of the 
muon anomalous magnetic moment and electric dipole moment. 
A new beamline (H-line) is being constructed. Ground survey is in 
progress for the area where a new experimental building is planned. 
The collaboration received a new grant-in-aid funding for construction 
of the detector system, field monitoring system, injection beamline, 
and design and testing of accelerator cavities. 
     Demonstration of laser ionization of muonium for the thermal 
energy positive muon source is in preparation. The experimental setup 
was reconfigured to fit to the upcoming experiment at J-PARC. A paper 
on the study of muonium emission from laser-ablated silica 
aerogel was accepted for publication in PTEP. Preparations for 1 MeV 
acceleration of muons with RFQ and IH-DTL are in progress at the J-PARC 
linac bldg. A design of coupling DAW (Disk And Washer) cavities for 
middle range velocity has been made. A detail simulation on spin 
dynamics of muon beam during acceleration is in progress. The 
three-dimensional beam injection has been studied with a low energy 
electron beam by KEK and Ibaraki University. 
     M. A. Rehman (Sokendai) defended the Ph.D thesis on this research 
in August. The silicon tracking detector is being assembled at 
the KEK mechanical engineering center in collaboration with Kyushu 
University. A paper on front-end electronics was published in IEEE TNS. 
PROGRAM ADVISORY COMMITTEE MEETING (by T. KOMATSUBARA)
     The 30th Program Advisory Committee (PAC) meeting was held, 
for the first time as a video conference, on July 20-22. In the 
committee, chaired by Dr. Rik Yoshida (Argonne National Laboratory), 
both new and old members whose term began from April 2020 and 
completed in March, respectively, participated jointly. Status of the 
experiments was reported, and proposals and near-term machine 
time allocation were discussed. 
https://kds.kek.jp/indico/event/34935/ 
     PAC report will be available through the following web page. 
http://j-parc.jp/researcher/Hadron/en/PAC_for_NuclPart_e.html 
    
The next PAC meeting will be held in January 2021. 
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4. [Materials and Life Science Division] by Toshiya OTOMO
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MAINTENANCE WORKS ARE GOING ON
1) Neutron Source
     On July 10, the used mercury target vessel, which was in 
operation from 2016 to 2017, was transported from MLF to the storage 
building, which is called RAM building where a total of 3 used target 
vessels are stored now. To increase the storing capability of used 
target vessels in RAM building, R&D for reduction of the volume of 
used targets is on-going. The proton beam window #3 which was used for 
3 years was replaced to #4. Since the proton beam window is a high 
radioactive component, the replacement work was carried out with 
special care to secure the radiation safety. On September 11, the 
operation tests on the safety interlocks of MLF were carried out 
successfully based on the periodical inspection that is conducted 
once every 5 years by the Nuclear Safety Technology Center (NUSTEC). 
PROPOSALS FOR 2020B + 2021A ROUND WERE RECEIVED
2) Neutron Instruments and Science
     The proposal round for the period combined with 2020B + 2021A 
was closed on July 15th. The largest ever number of 384 neutron 
proposals has been recorded. All the proposals are now under the 
review process whose results will be notified till the end of October. 
     MLF was operated with 1MW proton beam power almost for 2 days at 
the end of the last cycle. Some neutron instruments provided full 
power of neutrons to user experiments, while some performed test 
experiments such as high throughput data deduction, in situ 
experiments and new type detector development, and so on. 
     We are accelerating introduction of remote control and 
automated measurement of neutron experiments with the aid of a 
governmental grant, with adjusting to the "Corona era". We are going 
to join a new government project organized by New Energy and 
Industrial Technology Development Organization (NEDO) for the purpose 
of promoting wide use of fuel battery. 
     Outstanding scientific outcomes at MLF were issued with Press 
Releases: 1) Research of transverse asymmetry of gamma rays from 
neutron-induced compound state of 140La by T. Yamamoto and 
co-workers, and 2) Neutron diffraction monitoring of ductile cast 
iron under cyclic tension-compression by S. Harjo and co-workers. 
  CONSTRUCTION AND MAINTENANCE WORKS IN PROGRESS WHILE COVID-19 WOES
CONTINUE
3) Muon Science Facility (MUSE) 
     Since last March, MUSE experienced an unprecedented situation 
of frequent rescheduling and temporal shutdown to cope with the 
impact of COVID-19 that eventually led to the unscheduled shutdown of 
the entire J-PARC due to the government emergency declaration and 
associated regulations in mid-April. Fortunately, the operation 
was resumed in mid-May in response to the partial mitigation of the 
regulations. The proton beam power was then ramped up to 1 MW 
(920 kW for MLF) towards the end of the beam cycle in June, providing 
the first occasion for the renewed rotating muon production target to 
be exposed to the full-power beam without interruption for 32 hours. 
The target itself and surrounding devices were confirmed to respond 
as designed, endorsing the future operation. 
     In the MLF building, construction works for the new S2 area and 
remaining part of H line have started in the summer maintenance 
period.
The alignment of beamline magnets was completed for both H1 
and S2 area, respectively, and installation works for various 
supplies such as electricity, cooling water, and pressurized air are 
underway. The regular maintenance is also in progress for the 
rotating target and other beamline components in parallel with the 
construction works. 
     Meanwhile, in this proposal round, MUSE received record-many, 
73 muon proposals for the 2020B + 2021A periods, where the call was 
made for two periods together because of the delay due to COVID-19. 
Although MUSE still faces an uneasy situation for scheduling experiments 
in these rounds, the review process for these proposals is now underway. 
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5. [Nuclear Transmutation Division] by Shin-ichiro MEIGO
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LOMEASUREMENT OF SPECTRAL INTENSITY OF NEUTRONS PRODUCED AT THE TARGET
Accelerator-driven transmutation system (ADS) usinga high-intensity proton accelerator has been proposed. For the
radiation safety of ADS, the yield of neutrons produced at the
target is essential, especially for the neutrons penetrating through
the proton beam duct with the inverse direction to the beam. To
validate the calculation code employed for the design of ADS and
spallation neutron source, such as Particle and Heavy Ion Transport
code System (PHITS), measurements of spectrum intensity of neutrons
produced from the target were carried out in J-PARC. The spectral
intensity of neutrons was observed by the detector placed upstream
of the beam direction of the mercury target of MLF using the
time-of-flight technique.
Based on the present experiment, comparisons of calculations
were made. With the default new intra-nuclear cascade model of PHITS
(INCL4.6) coupled with the generalized evaporation model (GEM), the
calculation result reproduces the measured neutron yields fairly
well. In contrast, an apparent overestimation is observed for the former
default cascade model of Bertini coupled with GEM. This tendency is
consistent with the experimental results of neutron-induced reaction
rates obtained using the foils activation technique. Furthermore,
results of proton-induced neutron-production double-differential
cross-sections are found to be consistent with the present experimental
results. It was shown that INCL4.6/GEM is superior to Bertini/GEM in
terms of predicting 3-GeV proton-induced neutron production with the
inverse direction to the proton beam.
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6. [Safety Division] by Kotaro BESSHO and Yoshihiro NAKANE
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J-PARC SAFETY DAY 2020
The J-PARC Center had held "the J-PARC Safety Day" around May 23on which the radioactive material leak incident occurred in 2013.
However, due to concerns related to the novel coronavirus (COVID-19),
the Safety Day 2020 was postponed and held on September 9th by online
meeting.
Following the introductory talk by the J-PARC director, some
good-practices related to safety and health were awarded. The main
talk entitled "Introduction to occupational behavior analysis" was
given by Dr. Rieko Hojo (National Institute of Occupational Safety
and Health, Japan). Further a newly-produced video on the radioactive
material leak incident in 2013 was presented.
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7. [Editorial Note]
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Past issues are available from the below link.
http://j-parc.jp/c/en/topics/project-newsletter/index.html
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Editorial Board:
Toshifumi TSUKAMOTO (Chair): toshifumi.tsukamoto@kek.jp 
Kaoru SHIBATA: shibata.kaoru@ jaea.go.jp 
Takatoshi MORISHITA: morishita.takatoshi@jaea.go.jp
Dick MISCHKE (English Editor): mischke@triumf.ca 
Keiko NEMOTO (Secretary): nemoto.keiko@jaea.go.jp
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