Reactor Experiment for Neutrino Oscillation
RENO (Reactor Experiment for Neutrino Oscillations) is a short baseline reactor neutrino oscillation experiment in South Korea. The experiment was designed to either measure or set a limit on the neutrino mixing matrix parameter θ13, a parameter responsible for oscillations of electron neutrinos into other neutrino flavours. RENO has two identical detectors, placed at distances of 294 m and 1383 m, that observe electron antineutrinos produced by six reactors at the Hanbit Nuclear Power Plant (the old name: the Yeonggwang Nuclear Power Plant) in Korea.
On 3 April 2012, with some corrections on 8 April, the RENO collaboration announced a 4.9σ observation of θ13 ≠ 0, with
This measurement confirmed a similar result announced by the Daya Bay Experiment three weeks before and is consistent with earlier, but less significant results by T2K, MINOS and Double Chooz.
RENO released updated results[3] in December 2013:
References
- ^ RENO Collaboration (2012-04-03). "Observation of electron-antineutrino disappearance at RENO". Physical Review Letters. 108 (18): 191802. arXiv:1204.0626. Bibcode:2012PhRvL.108s1802A. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.108.191802.
- ^ RENO Collaboration (2012-04-04). "Announcement of the First Results from RENO: Observation of the Weakest Neutrino Transformation". Interactions NewsWire.
- ^ Seon-Hee Seo (for the RENO Collaboration). "New Results from RENO". arXiv:1312.4111 [physics.ins-det].