Bayesian analysis of a future β decay experiment's sensitivity to neutrino mass scale and ordering
Author(s)
Formaggio, Joseph
DownloadPublished version (1.209Mb)
Publisher Policy
Publisher Policy
Article is made available in accordance with the publisher's policy and may be subject to US copyright law. Please refer to the publisher's site for terms of use.
Terms of use
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Bayesian modeling techniques enable sensitivity analyses that incorporate
detailed expectations regarding future experiments. A model-based approach also
allows one to evaluate inferences and predicted outcomes, by calibrating (or
measuring) the consequences incurred when certain results are reported. We
present procedures for calibrating predictions of an experiment's sensitivity
to both continuous and discrete parameters. Using these procedures and a new
Bayesian model of the $\beta$-decay spectrum, we assess a high-precision
$\beta$-decay experiment's sensitivity to the neutrino mass scale and ordering,
for one assumed design scenario. We find that such an experiment could measure
the electron-weighted neutrino mass within $\sim40\,$meV after 1 year (90$\%$
credibility). Neutrino masses $>500\,$meV could be measured within
$\approx5\,$meV. Using only $\beta$-decay and external reactor neutrino data,
we find that next-generation $\beta$-decay experiments could potentially
constrain the mass ordering using a two-neutrino spectral model analysis. By
calibrating mass ordering results, we identify reporting criteria that can be
tuned to suppress false ordering claims. In some cases, a two-neutrino analysis
can reveal that the mass ordering is inverted, an unobtainable result for the
traditional one-neutrino analysis approach.
Date issued
2021Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Laboratory for Nuclear ScienceJournal
Physical Review C
Publisher
American Physical Society (APS)
Citation
Formaggio, Joseph. 2021. "Bayesian analysis of a future β decay experiment's sensitivity to neutrino mass scale and ordering." Physical Review C, 103 (6).
Version: Final published version