Field not found.

INFN PROJECT TO STUDY NEUTRINOS RECEIVES EUROPEAN FUNDING

13 September 2016

ERC CT 2016The European Research Council (ERC) has awarded the ERC Starting Grant 2016 to Manuela Cavallaro , researcher at the Southern National Laboratories (LNS) of the INFN in Catania.

The name of the project is NURE (NUclear REactions for neutrinoless double beta decay) and the € 1,271 million grant is the full amount of funding requested. There were almost 3,000 applications and the European Research Council has awarded 325 ERC-2016-SGTs to young European researchers, for a total of € 485 million.

The purpose of the NURE project is to investigate certain aspects of the nature of neutrinos. We will study their mass, and test the hypothesis proposed by Ettore Majorana about 80 years ago on the dual identity of neutrinos. According to this hypothesis, a neutrino is both a tiny particle of matter and its own antimatter counterpart: an antineutrino.

Specifically, our project is an experimental contribution to the measurement of one of nature’s building blocks, the nuclear matrix element, which links the average life of the nucleus that decays to the mass of the neutrino. Up until now this has been based on theoretical models. In this respect, our experiment can be considered complementary to others conducted elsewhere, for instance at the Gran Sasso National Laboratories (LNGS) of the INFN.

You might also be interested in

ALICE measures the conversion of lead into gold using Italian calorimeters

Immagine: MEG II ©PSI

In search of new physics: MEG II updates its record

PADME experiment_Frascati National Laboratories_INFN

New results from the Padme experiment in the search for the X17 particle

Hot aisle of the machine room at the INFN Turin computing center.

Computing Technologies for the Einstein Telescope: CTLAB4ET Laboratory inaugurated in Turin

ELI Beamlines building in Prague, Czech Republic ©ELI ERIC

EuPRAXIA chooses ELI Beamlines as second site for laser-driven accelerator

LHCb experiment at CERN (©CERN)

Matter in the mirror: difference in behaviour between baryons and anti-baryons observed for the first time