3.8 Article Proceedings Paper

KATRIN - direct measurement of a sub-eV neutrino mass

Journal

NUCLEAR PHYSICS B-PROCEEDINGS SUPPLEMENTS
Volume 145, Issue -, Pages 263-267

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.nuclphysbps.2005.04.019

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The KArlsruhe TRItium Neutrino (KATRIN) experiment is a next-generation direct neutrino mass experiment designed to investigate in a model-independent way the fundamental mass scale of neutrinos with sub-eV sensitivity. It combines an ultra-luminous molecular windowless gaseous tritium source with a high resolution electrostatic retarding spectrometer (MAGE filter system) to measure the spectral shape of beta-decay electrons close to the T, end point at 18.6 keV with unprecedented precision. If no neutrino mass signal is found, the KATRIN sensitivity after 3 years of measurements is m(v) < 0.2 eV (90 % CL.); a v-mass signal of m(v) = 0.35 (0.30) eV can be measured with 5 (3) sigma evidence. The experiment is scheduled to start first tritium runs in late 2008.

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