Nuclear Double Beta Decay, Fundamental Particle Physics, Hot Dark Matter, And Dark Energy
Hans V. Klapdor-Kleingrothaus, Irina V. Krivosheina

TL;DR
This paper discusses the observation of neutrinoless double beta decay, its implications for particle physics, neutrino masses, and potential connections to dark matter and dark energy.
Contribution
It reports the first observation of neutrinoless double beta decay with significant implications for fundamental physics and cosmology.
Findings
Observation of neutrinoless double beta decay at 6.4 sigma
Neutrino masses are at least 0.22 eV and degenerate
Neutrinos contribute >=4.7% to dark matter
Abstract
Nuclear double beta decay, an extremely rare radioactive decay process, is - in one of its variants - one of the most exciting means of research into particle physics beyond the standard model. The large progress in sensitivity of experiments searching for neutrinoless double beta decay in the last two decades - based largely on the use of large amounts of enriched source material in "active source experiments" - has lead to the observation of the occurrence of this process in nature (on a 6.4 sigma level), with the largest half-life ever observed for a nuclear decay process (2.2 x 10^{25} y). This has fundamental consequences for particle physics - violation of lepton number, Majorana nature of the neutrino. These results are independent of any information on nuclear matrix elements (NME)*. It further leads to sharp restrictions for SUSY theories, sneutrino mass, right-handed W-boson…
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