The standard three-neutrino oscillation paradigm, associated with small
squared mass splittings ≪0.1eV2, has been successfully built
up over the last 15 years using solar, atmospheric, long baseline accelerator
and reactor neutrino experiments. However, this well-established picture might
suffer from anomalous results reported at very short baselines in some of these
experiments. If not experimental artifacts, such results could possibly be
interpreted as the existence of at least an additional fourth sterile neutrino
species, mixing with the known active flavors with an associated mass splitting
≪0.1eV2, and being insensitive to standard weak interactions.
Precision measurements at very short baselines (5 to 15 m) with intense MeV
electronic antineutrino emitters can be used to probe these anomalies. In this
article, the expected antineutrino signal and backgrounds of a generic
experiment which consists of deploying an intense beta minus radioactive source
inside or in the vicinity of a large liquid scintillator detector are studied.
The technical challenges to perform such an experiment are identified, along
with quantifying the possible source and detector induced systematics, and
their impact on the sensitivity to the observation of neutrino oscillations at
short baselines.Comment: 21 pages, 27 figures, generated with pdflatex, accepted for
publication in Phys. Rev.