Expected geoneutrino signal at JUNO
Virginia Strati, Marica Baldoncini, Ivan Callegari, Fabio Mantovani,, William F. McDonough, Barbara Ricci, Gerti Xhixha

TL;DR
This paper predicts the geoneutrino signal at JUNO, a large underground detector, analyzing its potential to study Earth's interior composition amidst reactor background challenges.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed prediction of JUNO's geoneutrino signal, including local crust contributions and reactor background estimates, to aid Earth's radiogenic heat studies.
Findings
Predicted geoneutrino signal at JUNO: 39.7 TNU
Local crust contributes 44% of the signal
Reactor to geoneutrino signal ratio varies from 0.7 to 8.9
Abstract
Constraints on the Earth's composition and on its radiogenic energy budget come from the detection of geoneutrinos. The KamLAND and Borexino experiments recently reported the geoneutrino flux, which reflects the amount and distribution of U and Th inside the Earth. The KamLAND and Borexino experiments recently reported the geoneutrino flux, which reflects the amount and distribution of U and Th inside the Earth. The JUNO neutrino experiment, designed as a 20 kton liquid scintillator detector, will be built in an underground laboratory in South China about 53 km from the Yangjiang and Taishan nuclear power plants. Given the large detector mass and the intense reactor antineutrino flux, JUNO aims to collect high statistics antineutrino signals from reactors but also to address the challenge of discriminating the geoneutrino signal from the reactor background.The predicted geoneutrino…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAtmospheric Ozone and Climate · Neutrino Physics Research · Nuclear Physics and Applications
