Measurement of the neutrino velocity with the OPERA detector in the CNGS beam using the 2012 dedicated data
The OPERA Collaboration: T. Adam, N. Agafonova, A. Aleksandrov, A., Anokhina, S. Aoki, A. Ariga, T. Ariga, D. Autiero, A. Badertscher, A. Ben, Dhahbi, M. Beretta, A. Bertolin, C. Bozza, T. Brugi\`ere, R. Brugnera, F., Brunet, G. Brunetti, B. Buettner, S. Buontempo, B. Carlus

TL;DR
This study precisely measured neutrino velocities over 730 km using upgraded timing systems and geodesy, confirming neutrinos travel at speeds consistent with light within experimental uncertainties.
Contribution
The paper presents an improved neutrino velocity measurement with enhanced timing accuracy and baseline precision, confirming previous results with higher accuracy.
Findings
Neutrino velocity consistent with the speed of light within uncertainties
Improved timing system achieved ~1 ns accuracy
Results support no superluminal neutrino speeds
Abstract
In spring 2012 CERN provided two weeks of a short bunch proton beam dedicated to the neutrino velocity measurement over a distance of 730 km. The OPERA neutrino experiment at the underground Gran Sasso Laboratory used an upgraded setup compared to the 2011 measurements, improving the measurement time accuracy. An independent timing system based on the Resistive Plate Chambers was exploited providing a time accuracy of 1 ns. Neutrino and anti-neutrino contributions were separated using the information provided by the OPERA magnetic spectrometers. The new analysis profited from the precision geodesy measurements of the neutrino baseline and of the CNGS/LNGS clock synchronization. The neutrino arrival time with respect to the one computed assuming the speed of light in vacuum is found to be ns and $\delta…
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