Unambiguous Determination of the Neutrino Mass Hierarchy Using Reactor Neutrinos
Abstract
Determination of the neutrino mass hierarchy in a reactor neutrino experiment at medium baseline is discussed. Observation of the interference effects between the m231 and m232 oscillations enables a relative measurement independent of the knowledge of the absolute mass-squared difference. With a 20 kton liquid scintillator detector of 3%/E(MeV) energy resolution, the Daya Bay II Experiment at a baseline of 50 km from reactors of total thermal power 36 GW can determine the mass hierarchy at a confidence level of 2MH (10-12) (3-3.5 σ) in 6 years after taking into account the real spatial distribution of reactor cores. We show that the unknown residual energy non-linearity of the liquid scintillator detector has limited impact on the sensitivity due to the self-calibration of small oscillation peaks. Furthermore, an extra increase of 2MH 4(9) can be obtained, by including the precise measurement of the effective mass-squared difference m2μμ of expected relative error 1.5% (1%) from ongoing long-baseline muon neutrino disappearance experiments. The sensitivities from the interference and from absolute measurements can be cross checked. When combining these two, the mass hierarchy can be determined at a confidence level of 2MH (15-20) (4 σ) in 6 years.
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