6533b831fe1ef96bd1298f5b

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Results from the Project 8 phase-1 cyclotron radiation emission spectroscopy detector

B.a. VandevenderJonathan WeintroubGray RybkaN. S. OblathBenjamin MonrealC. ClaessensL. SaldañaJoseph A. FormaggioKareem KazkazS. DoelemanP. L. SlocumThomas ThümmlerJames NikkelR. G. H. RobertsonSebastian BöserL. De ViveirosA. Ashtari EsfahaniAndre YoungErin C. FinnJonathan R. TedeschiE. MachadoP. J. DoeA. M. JonesE. ZayasM. WachtendonkMartin FertlB H LaroqueL J RosenbergK. M. HeegerM. Guigue

subject

HistoryPhysics - Instrumentation and DetectorsCyclotronFOS: Physical sciencesElectronRadiationEducationlaw.inventionHigh Energy Physics - Experimentsymbols.namesakeHigh Energy Physics - Experiment (hep-ex)Internal conversionlawddc:530Cyclotron radiationEmission spectrumNuclear Experiment (nucl-ex)Nuclear ExperimentPhysicsPhysicsInstrumentation and Detectors (physics.ins-det)Computer Science ApplicationsComputational physicsLorentz factorsymbolsNeutrino

description

The Project 8 collaboration seeks to measure the absolute neutrino mass scale by means of precision spectroscopy of the beta decay of tritium. Our technique, cyclotron radiation emission spectroscopy, measures the frequency of the radiation emitted by electrons produced by decays in an ambient magnetic field. Because the cyclotron frequency is inversely proportional to the electron's Lorentz factor, this is also a measurement of the electron's energy. In order to demonstrate the viability of this technique, we have assembled and successfully operated a prototype system, which uses a rectangular waveguide to collect the cyclotron radiation from internal conversion electrons emitted from a gaseous $^{83m}$Kr source. Here we present the main design aspects of the first phase prototype, which was operated during parts of 2014 and 2015. We will also discuss the procedures used to analyze these data, along with the features which have been observed and the performance achieved to date.

10.1088/1742-6596/888/1/012074https://publikationen.bibliothek.kit.edu/1000076515