Nuclear Data to Reduce Uncertainties in Reactor Antineutrino Measurements: Summary Report of the Workshop on Nuclear Data for Reactor Antineutrino Measurements (WoNDRAM)
Catherine Romano, Nathaniel Bowden, Andrew Conant, Bethany Goldblum,, Patrick Huber, Jonathan Link, Bryce Littlejohn, Pieter Mumm, Juan Pedro, Ochoa-Ricoux, Shikha Prasad, Catherine Riddle, Alejandro Sonzogni, William, Wieselquist

TL;DR
This report summarizes a workshop where experts discussed nuclear data improvements to reduce uncertainties in reactor antineutrino measurements, aiming to understand anomalies and enhance reactor monitoring capabilities.
Contribution
The paper presents a consensus on prioritized nuclear data needs to improve antineutrino spectrum calculations and reactor monitoring accuracy.
Findings
Identification of key nuclear data uncertainties affecting antineutrino spectra.
Recommendations for nuclear data improvements to address the reactor anomaly.
Consensus on research priorities among international experts.
Abstract
The large quantities of antineutrinos produced through the decay of fission fragments in nuclear reactors provide an opportunity to study the properties of these particles and investigate their use in reactor monitoring. The reactor antineutrino spectra are measured using specialized, large area detectors that detect antineutrinos through inverse beta decay, electron elastic scattering, or coherent elastic neutrino nucleus scattering; although, inverse beta decay is the only demonstrated method so far. Reactor monitoring takes advantage of the differences in the antineutrino yield and spectra resulting from uranium and plutonium fission providing an opportunity to estimate the fissile material composition in the reactor. Recent experiments reveal a deviation between the measured and calculated antineutrino flux and spectra indicating either the existence of yet undiscovered neutrino…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
