McGill.CA / Science / Department of Physics

Physical Society Colloquium

Measuring Neutrino Masses: Then and Now

Joe Formaggio

Department of Physics
MIT

The turn of the 21st century witnessed a sudden shift in our fundamental understanding of particle physics. While the minimal Standard Model predicts that neutrino masses are exactly zero, the discovery of neutrino oscillations proved the Standard Model wrong. Neutrino oscillation measurements, however, shed light neither on the scale of neutrino masses, nor on the mechanism by which those are generated. The neutrino mass scale is most directly accessed by studying the energy spectrum generated by beta decay or electron capture — a technique dating back to Enrico Fermi's formulation of radioactive decay. In this talk, I review the methods and techniques – both past and present – aimed at measuring neutrino masses kinematically. I will focus on recent experimental developments that have emerged in the past decade, and provide an outlook of what future experiments might be able to achieve.

Friday, December 2nd 2022, 15:30
Ernest Rutherford Physics Building, Keys Auditorium (room 112)