Title of article
The KATRIN experiment - a direct measurement of the electron antineutrino mass in the sub-eV region Original Research Article
Author/Authors
L. Bornschein، نويسنده , , the KATRIN-Collaboration، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
هفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages
10
From page
14
To page
23
Abstract
With the evidence for massive neutrinos from recent ν-oscillation experiments, one of the most fundamental tasks of particle physics over the next years will be the determination of the absolute mass scale of neutrinos, which has crucial implications for cosmology, astrophysics and particle physics. The KArlsruhe TRItium Neutrino (KATRIN) experiment is the next-generation direct neutrino mass experiment with a sensitivity to sub-eV ν-masses. It combines an ultra-luminous windowless gaseous molecular tritium source with a high resolution electrostatic retarding spectrometer (MAC-E filter) to measure the spectral shape of β-decay electrons close to the endpoint at 18.6 keV with unprecedented precision. If no neutrino mass signal is found, the KATRIN sensitivity after 3 years of measurements is View the MathML source (90 % C.L.); a ν-mass signal of View the MathML source can be measured with 5 σ evidence.
Journal title
Nuclear physics A
Serial Year
2005
Journal title
Nuclear physics A
Record number
1202202
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