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We study the optimization of a green-field, two-baseline reactor experiment with respect to the sensitivity for electron antineutrino disappearance in search of a light sterile neutrino. We consider both commercial and research reactors and identify as key factors the distance of closest approach and detector energy resolution. We find that a total of 5 tons of detectors deployed at a commercial reactor with a closest approach of 25 m can probe the mixing angle $sin^22theta$ down to $sim5times10^{-3}$ around $Delta m^2sim 1$ eV$^2$. The same detector mass deployed at a research reactor can be sensitive up to $Delta m^2sim20-30$ eV$^2$ assuming a closest approach of 3 m and excellent energy resolution, such as that projected for the Taishan Antineutrino Observatory (TAO). We also find that lithium doping of the reactor could be effective in increasing the sensitivity for higher $Delta m^2$ values.
A considerable experimental effort is currently under way to test the persistent hints for oscillations due to an eV-scale sterile neutrino in the data of various reactor neutrino experiments. The assessment of the statistical significance of these h
Neutrino physics is nowadays receiving more and more attention as a possible source of information for the long-standing problem of new physics beyond the Standard Model. The recent measurement of the mixing angle $theta_{13}$ in the standard mixing
A future high-luminosity $Z$-factory has the potential to investigate lepton flavour violation. Rare decays such as $Z to ell_1^mp ell_2^pm$ can be complementary to low-energy (high-intensity) observables of lepton flavour violation. Here we consider
For a long time there were 3 main experimental indications in favor of the existence of sterile neutrinos: $bar{ u_e}$ appearance in the $bar{ u_mu}$ beam in the LSND experiment, $bar{ u_e}$ flux deficit in comparison with theoretical expectations in
We determine the sensitivities of short-baseline coherent elastic neutrino-nucleus scattering (CE$ u$NS) experiments using a pion decay at rest neutrino source as a probe for nonunitarity in the lepton sector, as expected in low-scale type-I seesaw s