Great news to end 2025 on: our first measurement of charged-current muon-neutrino-induced charged-kaon production on argon has been published in Physical Review Letters. https://t.co/5CPG4zWC9M
Our measurements of mesonless CC νμ interactions with final-state protons have been published in Physical Review D. This is the dominant topology for the Short-Baseline Program, hence the importance of these results for informing interaction models. https://t.co/KUxvgg46Dg
#ICYMI: Scientists on the MicroBooNE experiment further ruled out the possibility of one sterile neutrino as an explanation for results from previous experiments. Congratulations to the @Microboone collaboration on this exciting result!
https://t.co/AHAUSfk5xe
New MicroBooNE result in Nature! We exclude, at 95% CL, the 3+1 explanation of the LSND and MiniBooNE anomalies, as well as regions allowed by the gallium and Neutrino-4 anomalies. https://t.co/gmd0crJIUu
Ten years ago, the first neutrinos interacted in the liquid argon of the MicroBooNE particle detector at Fermilab, marking a turning point for the lab’s neutrino research program.
Exciting news! Tomorrow, we will be releasing new results! Join our seminar on the Fermilab YouTube channel at 3:30 pm Central Time, Wednesday 3rd December. https://t.co/Epbw7FnQWH
Another new MicroBooNE paper! New measurements of electron-neutrino interactions on argon that produce protons, as functions of electron energy, visible energy and electron-proton opening angle. https://t.co/RB8iz8ilrz
Now published in Physics Letters B! Our triple differential measurement of muon neutrino cross sections on argon. It’s really important to characterise interactions across a range of variables to get the full picture of the complex physics. https://t.co/kDWwSDVNEc
We’re being hosted by @illinoistech this week for our annual analysis retreat. A great opportunity for our whole collaboration to spend time working together, developing new ideas and making progress on upcoming measurements. Watch this space for new papers!
Next week, it’s MicroBooNE’s 10th birthday! A decade of scientific discovery, over 80 papers and 70 students graduated, and we’re still as strong as ever. Look out for our celebrations on Friday 17th October!
Last week we were hosted by @OxfordPhysics for our September collaboration meeting. We had a great week, discussing and developing our many upcoming physics measurements.
We’ve released a new paper! Measurements of charged-current muon-neutrino interactions on argon with a final-state charged pion. Modelling of pion production will be particularly important for upcoming experiments like @DUNEScience. https://t.co/evUsk94Q60
The MicroBooNE experiment's five-year dataset has shown that an unpredicted neutrino-flavor oscillation is not the cause of the low-energy excess seen by its predecessor, MiniBooNE.
Letter: https://t.co/1uejUyP6UP #OpenAccess
PhysMag: https://t.co/YynKN9MWrI
Our new charged-pion measurement has made it onto the cover of this issue of PRL! Showing a beautiful charged-current electron-neutrino interaction in MicroBooNE. https://t.co/ycWJG8mTIB
We’ve had a paper accepted in Physical Review Letters! The first measurement of electron-neutrino charged current single charged pion production on argon. Phys. Rev. Lett. 135, 061802 (2025). https://t.co/OCUIfSr2mI
Last week was the annual Fermilab Users Meeting and New Perspectives conference. MicroBooNE was well represented and four of our collaborators won best-poster prizes! Here are some pictures of MicroBooNErs presenting our physics.