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Flavio Gatti

Researcher at University of Genoa

Publications -  252
Citations -  7551

Flavio Gatti is an academic researcher from University of Genoa. The author has contributed to research in topics: Neutrino & Detector. The author has an hindex of 38, co-authored 239 publications receiving 6483 citations. Previous affiliations of Flavio Gatti include Sapienza University of Rome & Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Search for the lepton flavour violating decay μ + → e + γ with the full dataset of the MEG experiment

A. M. Baldini, +93 more
TL;DR: The final results of the search for the lepton flavour violating decay were presented in this paper, based on the full dataset collected by the MEG experiment at the Paul Scherrer Institut in the period 2009-2013.
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New Constraint on the Existence of the μ + → e + γ Decay

TL;DR: The data collected by the MEG experiment at the Paul Scherrer Institut show no excess of events compared to background expectations and yield a new upper limit on the branching ratio of this decay of 5.7 × 10(-13) (90% confidence level).
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Direct measurement of the 7Be solar neutrino flux with 192 days of Borexino data

C. Arpesella, +135 more
TL;DR: This result is the first direct measurement of the survival probability for solar nu(e) in the transition region between matter-enhanced and vacuum-driven oscillations and improves the experimental determination of the flux of 7Be, pp, and CNO solarnu(e), and the limit on the effective neutrino magnetic moment using solar neutrinos.
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Science and technology of BOREXINO: A Real time detector for low-energy solar neutrinos

Gianluca Alimonti, +97 more
TL;DR: Borexino as mentioned in this paper, a real-time device for low energy neutrino spectroscopy, is nearing completion of construction in the underground laboratories at Gran Sasso, Italy (LNGS).
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The design of the MEG II experiment

TL;DR: The MEG experiment, designed to search for the decay of the branching ratio, reached a sensitivity level of 5.3 × 10−13 in 2013 as discussed by the authors, which was improved to 6.6× 10−14 in 2014.