Current Direct Neutrino Mass Experiments
G. Drexlin, V. Hannen, S. Mertens, C. Weinheimer

TL;DR
This paper reviews the current status and future prospects of direct neutrino mass experiments, highlighting technological challenges and new approaches aiming to measure the neutrino mass in the sub-eV range.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of existing and upcoming direct neutrino mass experiments, emphasizing technological innovations and potential sensitivities.
Findings
KATRIN aims for 200 meV sensitivity at 90% C.L.
New experiments like MARE, ECHO, and Project8 could measure sub-eV neutrino masses.
Technological challenges include source stability, energy resolution, and background reduction.
Abstract
In this contribution we review the status and perspectives of direct neutrino mass experiments. These experiments investigate the kinematics of -decays of specific isotopes (H, Re, Ho) to derive model-independent information on the averaged electron (anti-) neutrino mass, which is formed by the incoherent sum of the neutrino mass eigenstates contributing to the electron neutrino. We first review the kinematics of -decay and the determination of the neutrino mass, before giving a brief overview of past neutrino mass measurements (SN1987a-ToF studies, Mainz and Troitsk experiments for H, cryo-bolometers for Re). We then describe the Karlsruhe Tritium Neutrino (KATRIN) experiment which is currently under construction at Karlsruhe Institute of Technology. The large-scale setup will use the MAC-E-Filter principle pioneered earlier to push the…
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