scispace - formally typeset
J

John F. Beacom

Researcher at Ohio State University

Publications -  359
Citations -  28360

John F. Beacom is an academic researcher from Ohio State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Neutrino & Supernova. The author has an hindex of 80, co-authored 338 publications receiving 24601 citations. Previous affiliations of John F. Beacom include Fermilab & University of Wisconsin-Madison.

Papers
More filters
Posted Content

Long-baseline neutrino oscillation physics potential of the DUNE experiment

B. Abi, +966 more
TL;DR: The sensitivity of the Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment (DUNE) to neutrino oscillation is determined, based on a full simulation, reconstruction, and event selection of the far detector and full simulation and parameterized analysis of the near detector.
Journal ArticleDOI

First results on ProtoDUNE-SP liquid argon time projection chamber performance from a beam test at the CERN Neutrino Platform

B. Abi, +1022 more
TL;DR: The ProtoDune-SP detector as discussed by the authors is a single-phase liquid argon time projection chamber with an active volume of 7.2× 6.1× 7.0 m3.
Journal ArticleDOI

Solar Atmospheric Neutrinos: A New Neutrino Floor for Dark Matter Searches

TL;DR: In this article, the existence of neutrino floor that will similarly limit indirect detection with the Sun, due to high-energy neutrinos from cosmic-ray interactions with the solar atmosphere, was shown.
Journal ArticleDOI

Investigation of Two Fermi-LAT Gamma-Ray Blazars Coincident with High-energy Neutrinos Detected by IceCube

Simone Garrappa, +345 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors performed a systematic analysis of all high-energy neutrino events satisfy the conditions of the gamma-ray blazar TXS 0506+056 as the first compelling IceCube source candidate.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tev-scale thermal WIMPs: Unitarity and its consequences

TL;DR: In this article, the authors reexamine unitarity bounds on the annihilation cross section of thermal weakly interacting massive particle (WIMP) dark matter and show that the largest allowed mass is 1 PeV.