Neutrino mass hierarchy determination and other physics potential of medium-baseline reactor neutrino oscillation experiments

Research output: Working paperPreprint

Abstract

Medium-baseline reactor neutrino oscillation (MBRO) experiments have been proposed to determine the neutrino mass hierarchy (MH) and to make precise measurements of the neutrino oscillation parameters. With sufficient statistics, better than ∼ 3%/ p E(MeV ) energy resolution and well understood energy non-linearity, MH can be determined by analyzing oscillation signals driven by the atmospheric mass-squared difference in the survival spectrum of reactor antineutrinos. With such high performance MBRO detectors, oscillation parameters, such as sin2 2θ12, ∆m2 21, and ∆m2 32, can be measured to sub-percent level, which enables a future direct unitarity test of the PMNS matrix to ∼1% level and helps the forthcoming neutrinoless double beta decay experiments to constrain the allowed hmββi values. Combined with results from the next generation long-baseline beam neutrino and atmospheric neutrino oscillation experiments, the MH determination sensitivity can reach higher levels. In addition to the neutrino oscillation physics, MBRO detectors can also be utilized to study geoneutrinos, astrophysical neutrinos and proton decay. We propose to start a U.S. R&D program to identify, quantify and fulfill the key challenges essential for the success of MBRO experiments.
Original languageEnglish
Publication statusPublished - 2013
Externally publishedYes

Publication series

NamearXiv

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