Searching for keV-mass Sterile Neutrinos with HUNTER

POSTER

Abstract

The HUNTER experiment (Heavy Unseen Neutrinos from Total Energy-momentum Reconstruction) uses missing-mass reconstruction to search for sterile neutrinos with masses in the 20-280 keV range. Radioactive 131-Cs contained in a magneto-optical trap undergoes electron capture decay, giving only low-energy products- a recoil 131-Xe ion, an x-ray, Auger electron(s), and the neutrino. All the charged decay products are detected with high solid angle efficiency and high resolution using Reaction-Ion Microscope spectrometers, and x-rays are detected with position-sensitive thin scintillator arrays. Currently, an experiment to trap the first ever Cs-131 MOT and measure its hyperfine structure is taking place. I will present on the progress of the experiment and future plans of completing a neutrino asymmetry experiment where we will measure the directional asymmetry of the recoil nuclei produced in K-capture on polarized Cs-131 nuclei.

*We thank the W. M. Keck Foundation, the NSF Foundation (2309364), the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, and our respective universities for financial support of HUNTER.

Publication: C J Martoff et al 2021 Quantum Sci. Technol. 6 024008

Presenters

  • Victoria M Palmaccio

    • Temple University

Authors

  • Victoria M Palmaccio

    • Temple University
  • Jeff Martoff

    • Temple University
  • Peter Smith

    • UCLA
  • Paul Hamilton

    • UCLA
  • Eric R Hudson

    • UCLA
    • University of California Los Angeles
  • Christian Schneider

    • UCLA
  • Eddie Chang

    • University of California, Los Angeles
  • Sami S Khamis

    • University of California, Los Angeles
  • Peter D Meyers

    • Princeton University
  • Guy Ron

    • Hebrew University of Jerusalem
  • Francesco Granato

    • Argonne National Laboratory
    • Temple University
  • Xunzhen Yu

    • Temple University
  • Frank C Malatino

    • University of Houston