26 May 2024 to 1 June 2024
La Biodola - Isola d'Elba (Italy)
Europe/Rome timezone

The CUPID neutrinoless double-beta decay experiment

30 May 2024, 08:31
2h 49m
Sala Elena

Sala Elena

Poster T1 - Detector Techniques for Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics Detector Techniques for Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics - Poster session

Speaker

Davide Trotta (INFN - Milano Bicocca)

Description

Neutrinoless double-beta decay (0νββ) is a key process to address some of the major outstanding issues in particle physics, such as the lepton number conservation and the Majorana nature of the neutrino. Several efforts have taken place in the last decades in order to reach higher and higher sensitivity on its half-life. The next-generation of experiments aims at covering the Inverted-Ordering region of the neutrino mass spectrum, with sensitivities on the half-lives greater than 1E27 years. Among the exploited techniques, low-temperature calorimetry has proved to be a very promising one, and will keep its leading role in the future thanks to the CUPID experiment. CUPID (CUORE Upgrade with Particle IDentification) will search for the neutrinoless double-beta decay of 100Mo and will exploit the existing cryogenic infrastructure as well as the gained experience of CUORE, at the Laboratori Nazionali del Gran Sasso in Italy. Thanks to 1596 scintillating Li2MoO4 crystals, enriched in 100Mo, coupled to 1710 light detectors CUPID will have simultaneous readout of heat and light that will allow for particle identification, and thus a powerful alpha background rejection. Numerous studies and R&D projects are currently ongoing in a coordinated effort aimed at finalizing the design of the CUPID detector and at assessing its performance and physics reach. In our talk, we will present the current status of CUPID and outline the forthcoming steps towards the construction of the experiment.

Collaboration CUPID
Role of Submitter The presenter will be selected later by the Collaboration

Primary authors

Davide Trotta (INFN - Milano Bicocca) Stefano Dell'Oro (Università di Milano-Bicocca)

Presentation materials