Abstract

The Karlsruhe Tritium Neutrino (KATRIN) experiment uses the kinematics of tritium β-decay to determine the effective neutrino mass with a sensitivity of mν = 200meV/c2 (90% C.L.). In order to measure the decay electrons it is important to guide them adiabatically from the source to the spectrometer. In addition the diffusion of tritium into the spectrometers from the source has to be reduced by 14 orders of magnitude as tritium inside the spectrometers would induce additional background. For these two tasks the transport and pumping section were constructed. The last part of this section is the Cryogenic Pumping Section (CPS), which aims to reduce the residual gas flow by more than seven orders of magnitude. For this a cold argon frost surface, with a ≈ 2 m2) area that is maintained at 3 K, will be prepared to adsorb the incoming tritium molecules.Before the whole KATRIN setup will be connected together the performance of CPS will be tested on its own. This poster presents the measurement results of the first cool-down of the CPS.This work was supported by the GRK1694 and the Helmholtz Association.

Highlights

  • The aim of the Karlsruhe Tritium Neutrino (KATRIN) experiment is to determine the effective neutrino mass with an unsurpassed sensitivity of mν = 200 meV/c2 (90% C.L.) by measuring the spectrum of the tritium β-decay

  • The KATRIN setup can be divided into two parts, the source and transport section and the spectrometer and detector section

  • In the first section gaseous tritium is injected into a windowless gaseous tritium source (WGTS)

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Summary

Related content

- Background processes in the KATRIN main spectrometer F.M. Fraenkle and KATRIN collaboration. - Measurements with the KATRIN prespectrometer F Habermehl and the KATRIN Collaboration. - Monitoring the KATRIN source properties within the beamline E. This content was downloaded from IP address 129.13.72.197 on 10/10/2017 at 14:39.

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