Search for eV Sterile Neutrinos -- The STEREO Experiment [TAUP 2017]
Stefan Schoppmann

TL;DR
The STEREO experiment aims to resolve the Reactor Antineutrino Anomaly by searching for eV-scale sterile neutrinos through precise spectral measurements at short baselines, utilizing a segmented detector at ILL Grenoble since 2016.
Contribution
This paper presents the design, methodology, and current status of the STEREO experiment, a novel setup to detect sterile neutrinos via spectral distortions at short distances.
Findings
Detector successfully measures antineutrino spectra at multiple baselines.
Segmentation allows for independent spectral analysis to identify oscillation signatures.
Ongoing data analysis aims to confirm or refute sterile neutrino existence.
Abstract
In the recent years, major milestones in neutrino physics were accomplished at nuclear reactors: the smallest neutrino mixing angle was determined with high precision and the emitted antineutrino spectrum was measured at unprecedented resolution. However, two anomalies, the first one related to the absolute flux and the second one to the spectral shape, have yet to be solved. The flux anomaly is known as the Reactor Antineutrino Anomaly and could be caused by the existence of a light sterile neutrino eigenstate participating in the neutrino oscillation phenomenon. Introducing a sterile state implies the presence of a fourth mass eigenstate, while global fits favour oscillation parameters around and . The STEREO experiment was built to finally solve this puzzle. It is one of the first running experiments built to…
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