Prototype of an angular-selective photoelectron calibration source for the KATRIN experiment

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Published 11 January 2011 Published under licence by IOP Publishing Ltd
, , Citation K Valerius et al 2011 JINST 6 P01002 DOI 10.1088/1748-0221/6/01/P01002

1748-0221/6/01/P01002

Abstract

The method of direct neutrino mass determination based on the kinematics of tritium beta decay, which is adopted by the KATRIN experiment, makes use of a large, high-resolution electrostatic spectrometer with magnetic adiabatic collimation. In order to target a sensitivity on m(ν) of 0.2eV/c2, a detailed understanding of the electromagnetic properties of the electron spectrometer is essential, requiring comprehensive calibration measurements with dedicated electron sources. In this paper we report on a prototype of a photoelectron source providing a narrow energy spread and angular selectivity. Both are key properties for the characterisation of the spectrometer. The angular selectivity is achieved by applying non-parallel strong electric and magnetic fields: Directly after being created, photoelectrons are accelerated rapidly and non-adiabatically by a strong electric field before adiabatic magnetic guiding takes over.

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10.1088/1748-0221/6/01/P01002