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Combined sensitivity to the neutrino mass ordering with JUNO, the IceCube Upgrade, and PINGU

  • (IceCube-Gen2 Collaboration)
  • University of Canterbury
  • German Electron Synchrotron
  • Université libre de Bruxelles
  • University of Copenhagen
  • The Oskar Klein Centre
  • University of Geneva
  • Marquette University
  • Pennsylvania State University
  • Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen-Nürnberg
  • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • RWTH Aachen University
  • South Dakota School of Mines & Technology
  • Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
  • Columbia University
  • University of California at Irvine
  • Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz
  • University of California at Berkeley
  • Ohio State University
  • University of Wuppertal
  • Ruhr University Bochum
  • University of Rochester
  • University of Maryland, College Park
  • University of Kansas
  • Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
  • Technical University of Munich
  • Uppsala University
  • University of Wisconsin-Madison

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

54 Scopus citations

Abstract

The ordering of the neutrino mass eigenstates is one of the fundamental open questions in neutrino physics. While current-generation neutrino oscillation experiments are able to produce moderate indications on this ordering, upcoming experiments of the next generation aim to provide conclusive evidence. In this paper we study the combined performance of the two future multi-purpose neutrino oscillation experiments JUNO and the IceCube Upgrade, which employ two very distinct and complementary routes toward the neutrino mass ordering. The approach pursued by the 20 kt medium-baseline reactor neutrino experiment JUNO consists of a careful investigation of the energy spectrum of oscillated νe produced by ten nuclear reactor cores. The IceCube Upgrade, on the other hand, which consists of seven additional densely instrumented strings deployed in the center of IceCube DeepCore, will observe large numbers of atmospheric neutrinos that have undergone oscillations affected by Earth matter. In a joint fit with both approaches, tension occurs between their preferred mass-squared differences Δm312=m32-m12 within the wrong mass ordering. In the case of JUNO and the IceCube Upgrade, this allows to exclude the wrong ordering at >5σ on a timescale of 3-7 years - even under circumstances that are unfavorable to the experiments' individual sensitivities. For PINGU, a 26-string detector array designed as a potential low-energy extension to IceCube, the inverted ordering could be excluded within 1.5 years (3 years for the normal ordering) in a joint analysis.

Original languageEnglish
Article number032006
JournalPhysical Review D
Volume101
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 1 2020

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