Constraints on Light Sterile Neutrinos and Scalar Non-Standard Interactions Using the First Reactor Antineutrino Oscillation Results at JUNO
Pith reviewed 2026-05-21 09:27 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
JUNO's first 59 days of reactor data already constrain light sterile neutrinos and scalar NSI parameters.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
A spectral chi-squared fit to the prompt-energy spectrum from 59.1 days of JUNO data, using the Daya Bay-measured reactor flux and nuisance parameters for systematics, is performed in a 3+1 framework that incorporates scalar NSI. The analysis establishes sensitivity to light sterile neutrinos for Delta m squared 41 in the interval from roughly 10^{-5} to 10^{-2} eV squared, reaching sin squared 2 theta 14 values of order 0.1, and yields a bound on the scalar NSI parameter absolute value eta ee of order 0.01 that correlates with solar oscillation parameters.
What carries the argument
Spectral chi-squared fit to the prompt-energy distribution in an extended 3+1 neutrino framework that includes effective scalar NSI contributions.
Load-bearing premise
The reactor antineutrino flux spectrum is correctly given by the Daya Bay measurement and that the chosen nuisance parameters fully capture the relevant systematic uncertainties in flux normalization, spectral shape, backgrounds, and detector response.
What would settle it
A statistically significant oscillatory distortion in the JUNO prompt-energy spectrum at a frequency corresponding to a mass splitting near 10^{-3} eV squared that cannot be absorbed by adjustments to the nuisance parameters or standard three-flavor oscillations.
Figures
read the original abstract
Constraints on light sterile neutrinos and scalar non-standard neutrino interactions are obtained from the first reactor antineutrino results reported by JUNO. The analysis is based on a spectral $\chi^2$ fit to the prompt-energy distribution corresponding to 59.1 days of data, including full three-flavor oscillations extended to a $3+1$ framework and effective scalar NSI contributions. The reactor flux is modeled using the Daya Bay measured spectrum, and systematic uncertainties are accounted for through a set of nuisance parameters describing reactor flux normalization, spectral shape, background normalization, and detector response. It is found that JUNO is already sensitive to light sterile neutrinos in the mass-splitting range $10^{-5} \lesssim \Delta m^2_{41}/\text{eV}^2 \lesssim 10^{-2}$, probing mixing amplitudes down to $\sin^2 2\theta_{14} \sim \mathcal{O}(10^{-1})$. In addition, a constraint on the scalar NSI parameter $|\eta_{ee}| < \mathcal{O}(10^{-2})$ is obtained, with correlations with solar oscillation parameters. These results demonstrate the potential of JUNO to probe small deviations from the Standard Model resulting from new physics through precision measurements, with significant improvements expected as statistics and systematic control improve.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript reports constraints on light sterile neutrinos and scalar non-standard interactions (NSI) derived from the first 59.1 days of reactor antineutrino data at JUNO. It performs a spectral χ² fit to the prompt-energy distribution, extending the standard three-flavor oscillation framework to a 3+1 sterile neutrino model and incorporating effective scalar NSI contributions. The reactor flux is modeled using the Daya Bay measured spectrum, with systematic uncertainties handled via nuisance parameters for flux normalization, spectral shape, background normalization, and detector response. The analysis finds sensitivity to sterile neutrinos for mass splittings 10^{-5} ≲ Δm²₄₁/eV² ≲ 10^{-2} with sin²2θ₁₄ down to O(10^{-1}), and obtains a bound |η_ee| < O(10^{-2}) correlated with solar oscillation parameters.
Significance. If the central results hold after addressing the flux modeling, the work demonstrates JUNO's early reach for new-physics searches in the neutrino sector using real data. Credit is due for employing the full three-flavor plus sterile framework on actual experimental spectra and for including a standard set of nuisance parameters. The findings provide a useful benchmark for the experiment's potential as statistics and systematic control improve.
major comments (2)
- [Section 3 (Analysis Method)] Section 3 (Analysis Method) and associated flux-model description: the adoption of the Daya Bay measured spectrum as baseline, combined with only a single overall normalization and a generic spectral-shape nuisance parameter, does not demonstrably absorb site-specific differences in fission fractions, plutonium buildup, and off-equilibrium corrections between the Taishan/Yangjiang cores observed by JUNO and the Daya Bay cores. These differences produce energy-dependent flux variations at the few-percent level that can mimic or dilute the low-frequency spectral distortions expected from the quoted sterile-neutrino mass range or the scalar NSI term; the central sensitivity claims therefore rest on an unverified assumption that residuals are negligible in the 59.1-day sample.
- [Results section] Results section, sterile-neutrino sensitivity contours: the reported reach to sin²2θ₁₄ ∼ O(10^{-1}) for 10^{-5} ≲ Δm²₄₁ ≲ 10^{-2} eV² is presented without explicit quantification of how the fit χ² changes when the spectral-shape nuisance is allowed to vary more freely or when an additional reactor-specific shape uncertainty is introduced; this leaves open whether the claimed sensitivity is robust against plausible flux mismodeling.
minor comments (2)
- [Abstract] Abstract and throughout: the notation Δm²₄₁/eV² mixes the symbol with the unit; adopt a consistent style such as Δm²₄₁ (eV²) for clarity.
- [Figure captions] Figure captions (presumed): ensure that all nuisance-parameter pull values and their correlations with the sterile and NSI parameters are tabulated or shown in supplementary material for reproducibility.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the detailed and constructive feedback on our manuscript. We have carefully considered the major comments and provide point-by-point responses below. Where appropriate, we will revise the manuscript to address the concerns raised.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: Section 3 (Analysis Method) and associated flux-model description: the adoption of the Daya Bay measured spectrum as baseline, combined with only a single overall normalization and a generic spectral-shape nuisance parameter, does not demonstrably absorb site-specific differences in fission fractions, plutonium buildup, and off-equilibrium corrections between the Taishan/Yangjiang cores observed by JUNO and the Daya Bay cores. These differences produce energy-dependent flux variations at the few-percent level that can mimic or dilute the low-frequency spectral distortions expected from the quoted sterile-neutrino mass range or the scalar NSI term; the central sensitivity claims therefore rest on an unverified assumption that residuals are negligible in the 59.1-day sample.
Authors: We agree that site-specific differences in reactor fuel composition between the JUNO (Taishan/Yangjiang) and Daya Bay cores warrant careful consideration. The Daya Bay spectrum was chosen as the baseline because it provides the most precise empirical determination of the reactor antineutrino spectrum to date. Our generic spectral-shape nuisance parameter is designed to accommodate energy-dependent uncertainties at the few-percent level, which should cover the variations due to differences in fission fractions and plutonium buildup as reported in the literature. To make this explicit, we will revise Section 3 to include a quantitative assessment of the expected flux differences based on published core composition data, showing that any residual effects are smaller than the current systematic uncertainties and do not significantly impact the reported sensitivities for the 59.1-day dataset. revision: yes
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Referee: Results section, sterile-neutrino sensitivity contours: the reported reach to sin²2θ₁₄ ∼ O(10^{-1}) for 10^{-5} ≲ Δm²₄₁ ≲ 10^{-2} eV² is presented without explicit quantification of how the fit χ² changes when the spectral-shape nuisance is allowed to vary more freely or when an additional reactor-specific shape uncertainty is introduced; this leaves open whether the claimed sensitivity is robust against plausible flux mismodeling.
Authors: The sensitivity contours presented are already obtained after marginalizing over the full set of nuisance parameters, including the spectral shape. To further demonstrate robustness, we will perform and report additional fits in the revised manuscript where the spectral-shape nuisance is allowed to vary with a wider prior (e.g., doubled uncertainty) and where an extra reactor-specific shape uncertainty is added. Preliminary checks indicate that the sensitivity to sin²2θ₁₄ remains of order 10^{-1} with only modest degradation. These results will be included in the Results section or as a supplementary figure to address the referee's concern directly. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No circularity: constraints obtained from direct spectral fit to JUNO data with external flux model
full rationale
The paper performs a standard chi-squared spectral fit to the observed prompt-energy distribution from 59.1 days of JUNO data. The model incorporates three-flavor oscillations extended to 3+1 sterile neutrinos plus effective scalar NSI terms. Reactor flux is taken from the external Daya Bay measured spectrum, with nuisance parameters for normalization, shape, backgrounds, and detector response. No equation or step reduces the reported sensitivity ranges or |eta_ee| bound to a fitted parameter by construction, nor does any load-bearing premise rest on a self-citation chain. The derivation remains self-contained against the external data and standard nuisance treatment.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
free parameters (4)
- reactor flux normalization nuisance parameter
- spectral shape nuisance parameters
- background normalization nuisance parameter
- detector response nuisance parameters
axioms (2)
- domain assumption The Daya Bay measured spectrum provides an accurate model of the reactor antineutrino flux at JUNO.
- domain assumption Extension of three-flavor oscillations to a 3+1 framework plus effective scalar NSI is a valid description for the data.
Lean theorems connected to this paper
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IndisputableMonolith/Cost/FunctionalEquation.leanwashburn_uniqueness_aczel unclear?
unclearRelation between the paper passage and the cited Recognition theorem.
The reactor flux is modeled using the Daya Bay measured spectrum... χ² fit... 3+1 framework and effective scalar NSI contributions... |η_ee| < O(10^{-2})
What do these tags mean?
- matches
- The paper's claim is directly supported by a theorem in the formal canon.
- supports
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- extends
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- uses
- The paper appears to rely on the theorem as machinery.
- contradicts
- The paper's claim conflicts with a theorem or certificate in the canon.
- unclear
- Pith found a possible connection, but the passage is too broad, indirect, or ambiguous to say the theorem truly supports the claim.
Reference graph
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