25 research outputs found
DANSSino: a pilot version of the DANSS neutrino detector
DANSSino is a reduced pilot version of a solid-state detector of reactor
antineutrinos (to be created within the DANSS project and installed under the
industrial 3 GW(th) reactor of the Kalinin Nuclear Power Plant -- KNPP).
Numerous tests performed at a distance of 11 m from the reactor core
demonstrate operability of the chosen design and reveal the main sources of the
background. In spite of its small size (20x20x100 ccm), the pilot detector
turned out to be quite sensitive to reactor antineutrinos, detecting about 70
IBD events per day with the signal-to-background ratio about unity.Comment: 16 pages, 11 figures, 3 tables. arXiv admin note: substantial text
overlap with arXiv:1304.369
Search for sterile neutrinos at the DANSS experiment
DANSS is a highly segmented 1~m plastic scintillator detector. Its 2500
one meter long scintillator strips have a Gd-loaded reflective cover. The DANSS
detector is placed under an industrial 3.1~ reactor of the
Kalinin Nuclear Power Plant 350~km NW from Moscow. The distance to the core is
varied on-line from 10.7~m to 12.7~m. The reactor building provides about 50~m
water-equivalent shielding against the cosmic background. DANSS detects almost
5000 per day at the closest position with the cosmic
background less than 3. The inverse beta decay process is used to detect
. Sterile neutrinos are searched for assuming the model
(3 active and 1 sterile ). The exclusion area in the plane is obtained using a ratio of positron energy
spectra collected at different distances. Therefore results do not depend on
the shape and normalization of the reactor spectrum, as well
as on the detector efficiency. Results are based on 966 thousand antineutrino
events collected at 3 distances from the reactor core. The excluded area covers
a wide range of the sterile neutrino parameters up to
in the most sensitive region.Comment: 10 pages, 13 figures, version accepted for publicatio
WIMP-nucleon cross-section results from the second science run of ZEPLIN-III
We report experimental upper limits on WIMP-nucleon elastic scattering cross
sections from the second science run of ZEPLIN-III at the Boulby Underground
Laboratory. A raw fiducial exposure of 1,344 kg.days was accrued over 319 days
of continuous operation between June 2010 and May 2011. A total of eight events
was observed in the signal acceptance region in the nuclear recoil energy range
7-29 keV, which is compatible with background expectations. This allows the
exclusion of the scalar cross-section above 4.8E-8 pb near 50 GeV/c^2 WIMP mass
with 90% confidence. Combined with data from the first run, this result
improves to 3.9E-8 pb. The corresponding WIMP-neutron spin-dependent
cross-section limit is 8.0E-3 pb. The ZEPLIN programme reaches thus its
conclusion at Boulby, having deployed and exploited successfully three liquid
xenon experiments of increasing reach
Quenching Factor for Low Energy Nuclear Recoils in a Plastic Scintillator
Plastic scintillators are widely used in industry, medicine and scientific
research, including nuclear and particle physics. Although one of their most
common applications is in neutron detection, experimental data on their
response to low-energy nuclear recoils are scarce. Here, the relative
scintillation efficiency for neutron-induced nuclear recoils in a
polystyrene-based plastic scintillator (UPS-923A) is presented, exploring
recoil energies between 125 keV and 850 keV. Monte Carlo simulations,
incorporating light collection efficiency and energy resolution effects, are
used to generate neutron scattering spectra which are matched to observed
distributions of scintillation signals to parameterise the energy-dependent
quenching factor. At energies above 300 keV the dependence is reasonably
described using the semi-empirical formulation of Birks and a kB factor of
(0.014+/-0.002) g/MeVcm^2 has been determined. Below that energy the measured
quenching factor falls more steeply than predicted by the Birks formalism.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figure
Single electron emission in two-phase xenon with application to the detection of coherent neutrino-nucleus scattering
We present an experimental study of single electron emission in ZEPLIN-III, a
two-phase xenon experiment built to search for dark matter WIMPs, and discuss
applications enabled by the excellent signal-to-noise ratio achieved in
detecting this signature. Firstly, we demonstrate a practical method for
precise measurement of the free electron lifetime in liquid xenon during normal
operation of these detectors. Then, using a realistic detector response model
and backgrounds, we assess the feasibility of deploying such an instrument for
measuring coherent neutrino-nucleus elastic scattering using the ionisation
channel in the few-electron regime. We conclude that it should be possible to
measure this elusive neutrino signature above an ionisation threshold of
3 electrons both at a stopped pion source and at a nuclear reactor.
Detectable signal rates are larger in the reactor case, but the triggered
measurement and harder recoil energy spectrum afforded by the accelerator
source enable lower overall background and fiducialisation of the active
volume
ZE3RA: The ZEPLIN-III Reduction and Analysis package
ZE3RA is the software package responsible for processing the raw data from the ZEPLIN-III dark matter experiment and its reduction into a set of parameters used in all subsequent analyses. The detector is a liquid xenon time projection chamber with scintillation and electroluminescence signals read out by an array of 31 photomultipliers. The dual range 62-channel data stream is optimised for the detection of scintillation pulses down to a single photoelectron and of ionisation signals as small as those produced by single electrons. We discuss in particular several strategies related to data filtering, pulse finding and pulse clustering which are tuned using calibration data to recover the best electron/nuclear recoil discrimination near the detection threshold, where most dark matter elastic scattering signatures are expected. The software was designed assuming only minimal knowledge of the physics underlying the detection principle, allowing an unbiased analysis of the experimental results and easy extension to other detectors with similar requirements. ©2011 IOP Publishing Ltd and SISSA