21–26 Jun 2026
University of California, Irvine
US/Pacific timezone

RES-NOVA: Archaeological Pb-based observatory for SN neutrino detection

Not scheduled
20m
Conference Center (University of California, Irvine)

Conference Center

University of California, Irvine

Poster Astrophysical Neutrinos Poster session 2

Speaker

Riccardo Elleboro (INFN/Univaq)

Description

The RES-NOVA project hunts neutrinos from the cosmos (e.g. Sun, Supernovae) via coherent elastic neutrino-nucleus scattering (CEνNS) using an array of archaeological lead (Pb) based cryogenic detectors. The high CEνNS cross-section on Pb and the ultra-high radiopurity of archaeological Pb enable the operation of a highly sensitive neutrino observatory, equally sensitive to all neutrino flavors, with dimensions at the cm-scale. The first phase of the RES-NOVA project is planning to operate a demonstrator detector with a total volume of about (30 cm)3. It will be sensitive to SN bursts from the entire Milky Way Galaxy with >3σ sensitivity while running PbWO4 detectors with a 1 keV energy threshold. The main SN parameters can potentially be constrained with high precision while looking at (anti-)νμ/τ. The innovative experimental approach allows for delivering important physics results also in other astroparticle physics sectors, like direct Dark Matter searches and the detection of solar neutrinos.
In this poster, the potential of this new experimental approach will be outlined, as well as complementary aspects with the currently used technologies. In addition, the experimental sensitivity and the performance of the first prototype detectors will be shown.

Author

Riccardo Elleboro (INFN/Univaq)

Presentation materials