14 research outputs found

    Development of an 90Y calibration source and rejection of pileup backgrounds in the SNO+ experiment

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    PhDSNO+ is a multi-purpose liquid scintillator detector with the main aim of investigating neutrinoless double beta decay (0 2 ) of 130Te. The sensitivity of such rare decay searches is limited by backgrounds, therefore it is crucial to reduce and constrain backgrounds in the energy region of interest (ROI). This thesis presents the comprehensive study of particularly dangerous pileup backgrounds occurring in the scintillator with 0.3% of Tellurium-130 loading. The thesis determines which pileup backgrounds are the most problematic, estimates their event levels, describes their properties and methods to reject them from the ROI of 0 2 . To show the vital importance of this analysis, the thesis demonstrates the improvement of the sensitivity to the 130Te(0 2 ) half-life by 32%. This thesis presents the Channel Software Status (CSS) framework which has been developed to check the performance of each photomultiplier tube (PMT). It is one component of a processing pipeline that is crucial to ensuring the SNO+ experiment takes quality data. The framework has been tested on the air-fill data and is ready for further tuning using the stable water data. SNO+ has an extensive calibration program, including a proposed 90Y -emitting calibration source. This thesis outlines the benefits of using such a source to test the position and energy resolutions across the energy region spread up to 2.28 MeV. The thesis describes the design of the source and the manufacturing procedure. The performed tests demonstrated the promising potential for using 90Y to study properties of scintillators

    Search for invisible modes of nucleon decay in water with the SNO+ detector

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    This paper reports results from a search for nucleon decay through invisible modes, where no visible energy is directly deposited during the decay itself, during the initial water phase of SNO+. However, such decays within the oxygen nucleus would produce an excited daughter that would subsequently deexcite, often emitting detectable gamma rays. A search for such gamma rays yields limits of 2.5×1029  y at 90% Bayesian credibility level (with a prior uniform in rate) for the partial lifetime of the neutron, and 3.6×1029  y for the partial lifetime of the proton, the latter a 70% improvement on the previous limit from SNO. We also present partial lifetime limits for invisible dinucleon modes of 1.3×1028  y for nn, 2.6×1028  y for pn and 4.7×1028  y for pp, an improvement over existing limits by close to 3 orders of magnitude for the latter two

    Current Status and Future Prospects of the SNO+ Experiment

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    SNO+ is a large liquid scintillator-based experiment located 2 km underground at SNOLAB, Sudbury, Canada. It reuses the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory detector, consisting of a 12 m diameter acrylic vessel which will be filled with about 780 tonnes of ultra-pure liquid scintillator. Designed as a multipurpose neutrino experiment, the primary goal of SNO+ is a search for the neutrinoless double-beta decay (0] ) of 130 Te. In Phase I, the detector will be loaded with 0.3% natural tellurium, corresponding to nearly 800 kg of 130 Te, with an expected effective Majorana neutrino mass sensitivity in the region of 55-133 meV, just above the inverted mass hierarchy. Recently, the possibility of deploying up to ten times more natural tellurium has been investigated, which would enable SNO+ to achieve sensitivity deep into the parameter space for the inverted neutrino mass hierarchy in the future. Additionally, SNO+ aims to measure reactor antineutrino oscillations, low energy solar neutrinos, and geoneutrinos, to be sensitive to supernova neutrinos, and to search for exotic physics. A first phase with the detector filled with water will begin soon, with the scintillator phase expected to start after a few months of water data taking. The 0] Phase I is foreseen for 2017

    Background Analysis for the SNO plus Experiment

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    This research was supported by the European Unions Seventh Framework Programme FP7/2007-2013, under the European Research Council (ERC) grant agreement 278310

    The SNO+ experiment

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    The SNO+ experiment is located 2 km underground at SNOLAB in Sudbury, Canada. A low background search for neutrinoless double beta (0νββ) decay will be conducted using 780 tonnes of liquid scintillator loaded with 3.9 tonnes of natural tellurium, corresponding to 1.3 tonnes of 130Te. This paper provides a general overview of the SNO+ experiment, including detector design, construction of process plants, commissioning efforts, electronics upgrades, data acquisition systems, and calibration techniques. The SNO+ collaboration is reusing the acrylic vessel, PMT array, and electronics of the SNO detector, having made a number of experimental upgrades and essential adaptations for use with the liquid scintillator. With low backgrounds and a low energy threshold, the SNO+ collaboration will also pursue a rich physics program beyond the search for 0νββ decay, including studies of geo- and reactor antineutrinos, supernova and solar neutrinos, and exotic physics such as the search for invisible nucleon decay. The SNO+ approach to the search for 0νββ decay is scalable: a future phase with high 130Te-loading is envisioned to probe an effective Majorana mass in the inverted mass ordering region
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