Abstract
Precision measurements of the kinematics of weak decays offer a direct and nearly model-independent
approach to probe the absolute neutrino mass scale. The KArlsruhe TRItium Neutrino experiment (KATRIN)
is searching for the minute imprint of the neutrino mass in the endpoint region of the tritium
beta-decay spectrum.
KATRIN [1] employs a high-intensity gaseous molecular tritium source and a
high-resolution electrostatic filter with magnetic adiabatic collimation to target a neutrino-mass
sensitivity of 0.2 eV/c2, thus improving on previous experiments by an order of magnitude, after five
years of data-taking.
This talk presents the results of the first science run of KATRIN in which an initial dataset of a few
weeks allows to tighten the direct neutrino mass bound by about a factor of 2 already, yielding a new
upper limit of 1.1 eV/c2 (90% CL) [2]. The successful first campaign gives promising perspectives on
the long-term data harvest to exploit KATRIN's neutrino mass sensitivity goal and to open up further
interesting science channels in the search for physics beyond the Standard Model.
References:
[1] KATRIN Collaboration, "First operation of the KATRIN experiment with tritium", EPJ C 80
(2020) 264 [doi.org]
[2] KATRIN Collaboration, "Improved upper limit on the neutrino mass from a direct kinematic
method by KATRIN", PRL 123 (2019) 221802 [journals.aps.org]