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S. M. Oser

Researcher at University of British Columbia

Publications -  189
Citations -  19731

S. M. Oser is an academic researcher from University of British Columbia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Neutrino & Neutrino oscillation. The author has an hindex of 56, co-authored 171 publications receiving 17914 citations. Previous affiliations of S. M. Oser include Anschutz Medical Campus & University of Colorado Denver.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI

Direct evidence for neutrino flavor transformation from neutral current interactions in the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory

Q. R. Ahmad, +205 more
TL;DR: Observations of neutral-current nu interactions on deuterium in the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory are reported, providing strong evidence for solar nu(e) flavor transformation.
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Measurement of the rate of ve + d → p + p + e- interactions produced by 8B solar neutrinos at the sudbury neutrino observatory

Q. R. Ahmad, +205 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the total flux of 8B neutrinos was determined to be (5.44±0.99)×106 cm−2 s−1, in close agreement with the predictions of solar models.
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Indication of Electron Neutrino Appearance from an Accelerator-produced Off-axis Muon Neutrino Beam

K. Abe, +416 more
TL;DR: The T2K experiment observes indications of ν (μ) → ν(e) appearance in data accumulated with 1.43×10(20) protons on target, and under this hypothesis, the probability to observe six or more candidate events is 7×10(-3), equivalent to 2.5σ significance.
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Measurement of Day and Night Neutrino Energy Spectra at SNO and Constraints on Neutrino Mixing Parameters

Q. R. Ahmad, +205 more
TL;DR: The Sudbury Neutrino Observatory (SNO) has measured day and night solar neutrino energy spectra and rates, and a global solar neutRino analysis in terms of matter-enhanced oscillations of two active flavors strongly favors the large mixing angle solution.
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The T2K Experiment

K. Abe, +536 more
TL;DR: The T2K experiment as discussed by the authors is a long-baseline neutrino oscillation experiment whose main goal is to measure the last unknown lepton sector mixing angle by observing its appearance in a particle beam generated by the J-PARC accelerator.