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The JSNS$^2$ experiment aims to search for the existence of neutrino oscillations with $Delta {rm m}^2$ near 1 eV$^2$ at the J-PARC Materials and Life Science Experimental Facility (MLF). A 3~GeV 1~MW proton beam incident on a mercury target produces an intense neutrino source from muon decay at rest ($mu^{+} rightarrow e^{+} + bar{ u}_{mu} + u_{e}$). The oscillation to be searched for is $bar{ u}_{mu}$ to $bar{ u}_{e}$, detected via the inverse beta decay~(IBD) reaction ($bar{ u}_{e} + p rightarrow e^{+} + n$), which is then distinctively tagged by gammas from neutron capture of Gadolinium. The first of two detectors with 17 tons fiducial volume is currently under construction at a distance of 24 m from the mercury target. JSNS$^2$ is expected to provide the ultimate test of the LSND anomaly by replicating nearly identical conditions. The status of the experiment, which is expected to start taking data in Spring 2019, is discussed and its physics potential reviewed.
SNO+ is a large liquid scintillator-based experiment located 2km underground at SNOLAB, Sudbury, Canada. It reuses the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory detector, consisting of a 12m diameter acrylic vessel which will be filled with about 780 tonnes of ul
The determination of the neutrino mass hierarchy, whether the $ u _3$ neutrino mass eigenstate is heavier or lighter than the $ u _1$ and $ u _2$ mass eigenstates, is one of the remaining undetermined fundamental aspects of the Standard Model in the
The KATRIN experiment, presently under construction in Karlsruhe, Germany, will improve on previous laboratory limits on the neutrino mass by a factor of ten. KATRIN will use a high-activity, gaseous T2 source and a very high-resolution spectrometer
The PIENU experiment at TRIUMF aims to measure the pion decay branching ratio $R={Gamma}({pi}^+{rightarrow}e^+{ u}_e({gamma}))/{Gamma}({pi}^+{rightarrow}{mu}^+{ u}_{mu}({gamma}))$ with precision $<0.1$% to provide a sensitive test of electron-muon un
KIMS-NaI is a direct detection experiment searching for Weakly Interacting Massive Particles (WIMP) via their scattering off of nuclei in a NaI(Tl) crystal. The KIMS-NaI collaboration has carried out tests of six crystals in the Yangyang underground