BEST impact on sterile neutrino hypothesis

V. V. Barinov,1,2 D. S. Gorbunov1,3

1Institute for Nuclear Research of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow 117312, Russia 2Physics Department, Moscow State University, Vorobievy Gory, Moscow 119991, Russia 3Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology, Dolgoprudny 141700, Russia

Recently the Baksan Experiment on Sterile Transitions (BEST) has presented results [1] con- firming the gallium anomaly — lacks of electron neutrinos νe at calibrations of SAGE and GALLEX — at the statistical significance exceeding 5σ. This result is consistent with explanation of the gallium anomaly as electron neutrino oscillations into sterile neutrino, \u03bds. Within this explanation the BEST experiment itself provides the strongest evidence for the sterile neutrino among all the previous anomalous results in the neutrino sector. We combine the results of gallium experiments with searches for sterile neutrinos in reactor antineutrino experiments (assuming CPT-conservation in the 3+1 neutrino sector). While the 'gallium' best fit point in the model parameter space (sterile neutrino mass squared mνs2 ≈ 1.25 eV2, sterile-electron neutrino mixing sin22θ ≈ 0.34) is excluded by these searches, a part of the BEST-favored 2σ region with mνs2 > 5 eV2 is consistent with all of them. Remarkably, the regions advertised by anomalous results of the NEUTRINO-4 experiment overlap with those of the BEST experiment: the best fit point of the joint analysis is sin22θ ≈ 0.38, mνs2 ≈ 7.3 eV2 , the favored region will be explored by the KATRIN experiment. The sterile neutrino explanation of the BEST results would suggest not only the extension of the Standard Model of particle physics, but also either serious modifications of the Standard Cosmological Model and Solar Model, or a specific modification of the sterile sector needed to suppress the sterile neutrino production in the early Universe and in the Sun.


[Back to Seminar Programme] [Seminar Home Page] [Department of Theoretical Astrophysics] [Ioffe Institute]

Page created on October 19, 2021.