Neutrino Physics with the PTOLEMY project

06/18/2019
Gianpiero Mangano (INFN Napoli)
Bat 713, salle de séminaires Galilée
(Piano)
18/06/2019
from 10:00 to 11:00

The PTOLEMY project aims to develop a scalable design for a Cosmic Neutrino Background (CNB) detector, the first of its kind and the only one conceived that can look directly at the image of the Universe encoded in neutrino background produced in the first second after the Big Bang. The scope of the work for the next three years is to complete the conceptual design of this detector and to validate with direct measurements that the non-neutrino backgrounds are below the expected signal from the Big Bang. In this talk I discuss in details the theoretical aspects of the experiment and its physics goals. In particular, I mainly address three issues. First the sensitivity of PTOLEMY to the standard neutrino mass scale. I then consider the perspectives of the experiment to detect the CNB via neutrino capture on tritium as a function of the neutrino mass scale and the energy resolution of the apparatus. Finally, I consider an extra sterile neutrino with mass in the eV range, coupled to the active states via oscillations, which has been advocated in view of neutrino oscillation anomalies. This extra state would contribute to the tritium decay spectrum, and its properties, mass and mixing angle, could be studied by analysing the features in the beta decay electron spectrum.

Scientific local contact: Valeria Pettorino, organizer: M. Bugli

SAP