Online Monitoring of the Osiris Reactor with the Nucifer Neutrino Detector
G. Boireau, L. Bouvet, A.P. Collin, G. Coulloux, M. Cribier, H., Deschamp, V. Durand, M. Fechner, V. Fischer, J. Gaffiot, N. Gerard Castaing,, R. Granelli, Y. Kato, T. Lasserre, L. Latron, P. Legou, A. Letourneau, D., Lhuillier, G. Mention, T. Mueller, T-A. Nghiem, N. Pedrol

TL;DR
This paper reports the successful detection of reactor neutrinos using the Nucifer detector near the Osiris reactor, demonstrating potential for reactor monitoring and safeguards, while also exploring neutrino oscillation and plutonium management applications.
Contribution
First successful neutrino detection at a very short baseline with the Nucifer detector, providing new insights into reactor monitoring and neutrino physics.
Findings
Detected 40760 electron antineutrinos over 145 days
Measured antineutrino flux consistent with predictions
No conclusive evidence for sterile neutrinos due to background
Abstract
Originally designed as a new nuclear reactor monitoring device, the Nucifer detector has successfully detected its first neutrinos. We provide the second shortest baseline measurement of the reactor neutrino flux. The detection of electron antineutrinos emitted in the decay chains of the fission products, combined with reactor core simulations, provides an new tool to assess both the thermal power and the fissile content of the whole nuclear core and could be used by the Inter- national Agency for Atomic Energy (IAEA) to enhance the Safeguards of civil nuclear reactors. Deployed at only 7.2m away from the compact Osiris research reactor core (70MW) operating at the Saclay research centre of the French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission (CEA), the experiment also exhibits a well-suited configuration to search for a new short baseline oscillation. We report the first…
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