30 May 2022 to 30 October 2022
Europe/Berlin timezone

The Karlsruhe Tritium Neutrino Experiment

Not scheduled
20m

Description

The Karlsruhe Tritium Neutrino (KATRIN) experiment is designed to measure a high-precision integral spectrum of the endpoint region of T2 beta decay, with the primary goal of probing the absolute mass scale of the neutrino. After a first tritium commissioning campaign in 2018, the experiment has been regularly running since 2019, and in its first two measurement campaigns has already achieved a sub-eV sensitivity. After 1000 days of data-taking, KATRIN’s design sensitivity is 0.2 eV at the 90% confidence level. Here we briefly discuss the current status of KATRIN; prospects for measuring the neutrino mass and other physics observables, including sterile neutrinos and other beyond-Standard-Model hypotheses; and research-and-development projects that may further improve the KATRIN sensitivity.

Authors

Prof. Diana Parno (Carnegie Mellon University) Prof. Kathrin Valerius (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology) Prof. Susanne Mertens (Technical University of Munich)

Presentation materials