Status and Prospect of JUNO-TAO

28 Aug 2025, 15:00
20m
North Hall #1

North Hall #1

Oral Neutrino Physics and Astrophysics Neutrino Physics and Astrophysics

Speaker

Ruhui Li (IHEP)

Description

Taishan Antineutrino Observatory (TAO) is a satellite experiment of JUNO. It consists of a ton-level liquid scintillator detector at around 44 meters from a reactor core of the Taishan Nuclear Power Plant. It detects reactor antineutrinos by inverse beta decay (IBD). Silicon photomultipliers which have ~95% coverage and ~50% photon detection efficiency are used to collect photoelectrons, resulting in the light yield is ~4500 photoelectrons per MeV. Dark noise of SiPM is suppressed by orders of magnitude by cooling the detector down to -50 degrees. The main goal of TAO is to get the precise energy spectrum of reactor antineutrinos with very high energy resolution (<2% at 1 MeV). It will deliver a reference energy spectrum for JUNO to reduce the impact from the reactor antineutrino flux and spectrum model uncertainties, and provide a benchmark to nuclear databases. In addition, TAO can also search for light sterile neutrinos with a mass scale around 1 eV and help to verify of the technology for reactor monitoring and safeguard.
This talk will show the latest status and prospect of TAO detector.

Collaboration you are representing JUNO

Author

Ruhui Li (IHEP)

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