1,033 research outputs found
Neutrinoless double beta decay
The status of the search for neutrinoless double beta decay is reviewed. The
effort to reach the sensitivity needed to cover the effective Majorana neutrino
mass corresponding to the degenerate and inverted mass hierarchy is described.
Various issues concerning the theory (and phenomenology) of the relation
between the decay rate and the absolute neutrino mass scale
are discussed, in particular the issue of mechanism of the
decay. Finally, the relation between the neutrino magnetic moments and the
charge conjugation property (Dirac vs. Majorana) is described.Comment: Lecture notes at TASI2006, Boulder, CO, June 2006; to be published in
proceeding
Nuclear structure and double beta decay
Study of the neutrinoless double beta decay, , includes a
variety of problems of nuclear structure theory. They are reviewed here. The
problems range from the mechanism of the decay, i.e. exchange of the light
Majorana neutrino neutrino versus the exchange of some heavy, so far unobserved
particle. Next, the proper expressions for the corresponding operator are
described that should include the effects of the nucleon size and of the recoil
order terms in the hadronic current. The issue of proper treatment of the short
range correlations, in particular for the case of the heavy particle exchange,
is discussed also. The variety of methods employed these days in the
theoretical evaluation of the nuclear matrix elements is briefly
described and the difficulties causing the spread and hence uncertainty in the
values of are discussed. Finally, the issue of the axial current
quenching, and of the resonance enhancement in the case of double electron
capture are described.Comment: Review paper accepted for publication in the special issue of J.
Phys. G: Nucl. Phys. devoted to the double beta deca
Conversion of electron spectrum associated with fission into the antineutrino spectrum
The accuracy of the procedure that converts the experimentally determined
electron spectrum associated with fission of the nuclear fuels ^{235}U,
^{239}Pu, ^{241}Pu, and ^{238}U into the spectrum is examined. By
using calculated sets of mutually consistent spectra it is shown that the
conversion procedure can result in a small 1% error provided several
conditions are met. Chief among them are the requirements that the average
nuclear charge as a function of the decay endpoint energy is
independently known and that the spectrum is binned into bins
that are several times larger than the width of the slices used to fit the
electron spectrum.Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Evaluation of reactor neutrino flux: issues and uncertainties
Evaluation of the reactor flux and spectrum is an essential
ingredient of their application in the neutrino oscillation studies. Two
anomalies, i.e. discrepancies between the observed and expected count rates,
are widely discussed at the resent time. The total rate is 6\% lower
than the expectation at all distances 10 m from the reactor. And there is a
shoulder (often referred to as "bump") at neutrino energies 5-7 MeV, not
predicted in the calculated spectrum. I review the ways the flux and spectrum
is evaluated and concentrate on the error budget. I argue that far reaching
conclusions based on these anomalies should await a thorough understanding of
the uncertainties of the spectrum, and point out possible standard physics
sources of the anomalies.Comment: Talk presented at NuPhys2015 (London, 16-18 December 2015). 8 pages,
LaTeX, 2 pdf figure
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