News
New NOvA results add to mystery of neutrinos
Centre for Fundamental Physics20 June 2024
The international NOvA collaboration presented new results at the Neutrino 2024 conference in Milan, Italy, on June 17. The collaboration doubled their neutrino data since their previous release four years ago, including adding a new low-energy sample of electron neutrinos. The new results are consistent with previous NOvA results, but with improved precision. The data favor the "normal" ordering of neutrino masses more strongly than before, but ambiguity remains around the neutrino's oscillation properties.
NOvA Analysis Coordinator Dr Linda Cremonesi leads the NOvA Queen Mary group, which includes academics Dr Abbey Waldron and Prof Jon Hays; postdocs Dr Alexander Booth, Dr Prabhjot Singh, and Dr Simranjit Chhibra; and PhD students Kevin Vockerodt and Oscar Chow.
The latest NOvA data provide a very precise measurement of the bigger splitting between the squared neutrino masses and slightly favour the normal mass ordering. That precision on the mass splitting means that, when coupled with data from other experiments performed at nuclear reactors, the data favor the normal ordering at almost 7:1 odds. This suggests that neutrinos adhere to the normal ordering, but physicists have not met the high threshold of certainty required to declare a discovery.
Read the full story here: news.fnal.gov/2024/06/new-nova-results-add-to-mystery-of-...
Email: l.cremonesi@qmul.ac.uk
Updated by: Linda Cremonesi