1–6 Sept 2025
Liverpool, UK
Europe/London timezone

eV and keV sterile neutrinos search with the KATRIN experiment

4 Sept 2025, 11:25
25m
Space 9 (The Spine, Liverpool)

Space 9

The Spine, Liverpool

Presentation WG5 - Neutrinos Beyond PMNS WG5

Speaker

Anthony Onillon (Max-Planck-Institut für Kernphysik)

Description

The KATRIN experiment is designed to measure the mass of the electron antineutrino by studying the high-energy end of the tritium β decay spectrum. In addition, KATRIN is also a well-suited instrument to explore the sterile neutrino hypothesis. The existence of sterile neutrinos would cause a kink-like distortion in the spectrum.

Using the same datasets as for active neutrino mass, KATRIN has recently presented new results on the search for sterile neutrinos at the eV scale, complementing the reactor and radioactive source experiments. With an endpoint of 18.6 keV, KATRIN also offers a high potential for the search for sterile neutrinos in the keV range. With data acquired during the 2018 commissioning campaign, KATRIN reported results from a search for keV-scale neutrinos in the restricted mass range of 0.01 to 1.6 keV. The current KATRIN detector is not designed to handle the higher count rate that occurs with a wider mass range. Equipped  with the TRISTAN detector, KATRIN aims to search for keV sterile neutrinos across the full tritium beta decay spectrum. This detector is currently in production and is scheduled to be operational in KATRIN in 2026.

In this talk, I will present the latest results from KATRIN on the search for sterile neutrinos at eV and keV scales, as well as the ongoing efforts to conduct a highly sensitive search for the sterile neutrino at keV scales with TRISTAN.

Author

Anthony Onillon (Max-Planck-Institut für Kernphysik)

Presentation materials