Project 8: A frequency-based approach to measure the absolute neutrino mass scale
ORAL
Abstract
Neutrino flavor oscillation experiments prove that neutrinos do have non- zero masses. Extensions to the Standard Model of Particle Physics have been developed to explain the non-zero masses and can be directly tested by a measurement of the absolute neutrino mass scale. A highest precision measurement of the β−-decay spectrum of tritium around its endpoint region (Q = 18.6 keV) can reveal the antielectron neutrino mass mν. The current state of the art experiment stretches all technological limits to probe mν down to 200 meV/c2. The Project 8 collaboration envisions a completely new path to measure mν. The recently demonstrated technique of Cyclotron Radiation Emission Spectroscopy (CRES) allows for a frequency-based measurement of the decay electron energy. I will present this new approach and the collaboration’s staged approach to devise an experiment that combines CRES with an atomic tritium source to achieve a neutrino mass sensitivity of 40meV/c2, below the minimum mν ̄e allowed for the inverted neutrino mass ordering scheme.
*This work is supported by the US DOE Office of Nuclear Physics, the US NSF, the PRISMA Cluster of Excellence at the University of Mainz, and internal investments at all institutions.
–
Presenters
-
Martin Fertl
- Univ of Washington