Date of Award

Spring 1-1-2025

Document Type

Dissertation

Degree Name

Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)

Department

Physics

First Advisor

Heeger, Karsten

Abstract

Direct neutrino mass measurement is one of the frontiers of particle and nuclear physics, with the most recent measurements setting an upper bound of 0.45 eV/c^2 and cosmological models and observations predicting an upper bound on the sum of neutrino masses of 0.12 eV/c^2. The next generation of neutrino mass experiments require new technology to push beyond the statistical and systematic limits of current measuring capabilities. Project 8 is a collaboration seeking to make this possible by combining the well-established tritium endpoint method with a relatively new technique called CRES. CRES uses the RF emission of electrons undergoing cyclotron motion to precisely measure the tritium beta spectrum. RF detectors and detection techniques tailored for CRES are the subject of this thesis, with three areas of focus: antenna arrays, meta-material insulation, and resonant cavities. A comprehensive investigation of antenna arrays is presented with an idealized case study reaching the Project 8 goal of 40 meV/c^2. Design, simulation, and measurement of an IR-reflecting, RF-transparent meta-material is shown for potential application with antenna arrays. A conceptual design study of resonant cavity-based CRES is also described for the purpose of future Project 8 demonstrator experiments. These developments contribute new microwave techniques to the large-scale R&D effort for constraining the neutrino mass.

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