146 research outputs found
Long term measurement of the 222Rn concentration in the Canfranc Underground Laboratory
We report the results of 6 years (2013–2018) of
measurements of 222Rn air concentration, relative humidity, atmospheric pressure and temperature in the halls A,
B and C of the Canfranc Underground Laboratory (LSC).
We have calculated all the Pearson correlation coefficients
among these parameters and we have found a positive correlation between the 222Rn concentration and the relative
humidity. Both correlated variables show a seasonal periodicity. The joint analysis of laboratory data and 4 years (2015–
2018) of the meteorological variables outside the laboratory
shows the correlation between the 222Rn concentration and
the outside temperature. The collected information stresses
the relevance of designing good Rn-mitigation strategies in
current and future experiments at LSC; in particular, we have
checked for two years (2017–2018) the good performance
of the mitigation procedure of the ANAIS-112 experiment.
Finally, we have monitored (2019–2021) for 2 years of live
time, the radon-free air provided by the radon abatement system installed in the laboratory.This research was funded by MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 under Grant PID2019-104374GB-I00; by MINECO-FEDER under Grants FPA2017-83133-P, and FPA2014-55986-P; by MICINN-FEDER under Grants FPA2011-23749; by CONSOLIDER-Ingenio 2010 Programme under Grants MultiDark CSD2009-00064 and CPAN CSD2007-00042; by the University of Zaragoza under Grant UZ2017-CIE-09; by the Spanish Meteorological Agency (AEMET), the Gobierno de Aragón (Group in Nuclear and Astroparticle Physics, ARAID Foundation and I. Coarasa predoctoral grant), the European Social Fund and by the LSC consortium
A New Limit on the Neutrinoless DBD of 130Te
We report the present results of CUORICINO a cryogenic experiment on
neutrinoless double beta decay (DBD) of 130Te consisting of an array of 62
crystals of TeO2 with a total active mass of 40.7 kg. The array is framed
inside of a dilution refrigerator, heavily shielded against environmental
radioactivity and high-energy neutrons, and operated at a temperature of ~8 mK
in the Gran Sasso Underground Laboratory. Temperature pulses induced by
particle interacting in the crystals are recorded and measured by means of
Neutron Transmutation Doped thermistors. The gain of each bolometer is
stabilized with voltage pulses developed by a high stability pulse generator
across heater resistors put in thermal contact with the absorber.
The calibration is performed by means of two thoriated wires routinely
inserted in the set-up. No evidence for a peak indicating neutrinoless DBD of
130Te is detected and a 90% C.L. lower limit of 1.8E24 years is set for the
lifetime of this process. Taking largely into account the uncertainties in the
theoretical values of nuclear matrix elements, this implies an upper boud on
the effective mass of the electron neutrino ranging from 0.2 to 1.1 eV. This
sensitivity is similar to those of the 76Ge experiments.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Radon and material radiopurity assessment for the NEXT double beta decay experiment
The Neutrino Experiment with a Xenon TPC (NEXT), intended to investigate the
neutrinoless double beta decay using a high-pressure xenon gas TPC filled with
Xe enriched in 136Xe at the Canfranc Underground Laboratory in Spain, requires
ultra-low background conditions demanding an exhaustive control of material
radiopurity and environmental radon levels. An extensive material screening
process is underway for several years based mainly on gamma-ray spectroscopy
using ultra-low background germanium detectors in Canfranc but also on mass
spectrometry techniques like GDMS and ICPMS. Components from shielding,
pressure vessel, electroluminescence and high voltage elements and energy and
tracking readout planes have been analyzed, helping in the final design of the
experiment and in the construction of the background model. The latest
measurements carried out will be presented and the implication on NEXT of their
results will be discussed. The commissioning of the NEW detector, as a first
step towards NEXT, has started in Canfranc; in-situ measurements of airborne
radon levels were taken there to optimize the system for radon mitigation and
will be shown too.Comment: Proceedings of the Low Radioactivity Techniques 2015 workshop
(LRT2015), Seattle, March 201
Double-beta decay of Te to the first 0 excited state of Xe with CUORICINO
The CUORICINO experiment was an array of 62 TeO single-crystal
bolometers with a total Te mass of kg. The experiment finished
in 2008 after more than 3 years of active operating time. Searches for both
and double-beta decay to the first excited state in
Xe were performed by studying different coincidence scenarios. The
analysis was based on data representing a total exposure of
N(Te)t=y. No evidence for a signal was
found. The resulting lower limits on the half lives are y (90% C.L.), and
y (90%
C.L.).Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
The LBNO long-baseline oscillation sensitivities with two conventional neutrino beams at different baselines
The proposed Long Baseline Neutrino Observatory (LBNO) initially consists of
kton liquid double phase TPC complemented by a magnetised iron
calorimeter, to be installed at the Pyh\"asalmi mine, at a distance of 2300 km
from CERN. The conventional neutrino beam is produced by 400 GeV protons
accelerated at the SPS accelerator delivering 700 kW of power. The long
baseline provides a unique opportunity to study neutrino flavour oscillations
over their 1st and 2nd oscillation maxima exploring the behaviour, and
distinguishing effects arising from and matter. In this paper we
show how this comprehensive physics case can be further enhanced and
complemented if a neutrino beam produced at the Protvino IHEP accelerator
complex, at a distance of 1160 km, and with modest power of 450 kW is aimed
towards the same far detectors. We show that the coupling of two independent
sub-MW conventional neutrino and antineutrino beams at different baselines from
CERN and Protvino will allow to measure CP violation in the leptonic sector at
a confidence level of at least for 50\% of the true values of
with a 20 kton detector. With a far detector of 70 kton, the
combination allows a sensitivity for 75\% of the true values of
after 10 years of running. Running two independent neutrino
beams, each at a power below 1 MW, is more within today's state of the art than
the long-term operation of a new single high-energy multi-MW facility, which
has several technical challenges and will likely require a learning curve.Comment: 21 pages, 12 figure
LiMoO Scintillating Bolometers for Rare-Event Search Experiments
We report on the development of scintillating bolometers based on lithium
molybdate crystals containing molybdenum depleted in the double- active
isotope Mo (LiMoO). We used two
LiMoO cubic samples, 45 mm side and 0.28 kg each,
produced following purification and crystallization protocols developed for
double- search experiments with Mo-enriched LiMoO
crystals. Bolometric Ge detectors were utilized to register scintillation
photons emitted by the LiMoO crystal
scintillators. The measurements were performed in the CROSS cryogenic set-up at
the Canfranc underground laboratory (Spain). We observed that the
LiMoO scintillating bolometers are characterized
by excellent spectrometric performance (3--6 keV FWHM at 0.24--2.6 MeV
's), moderate scintillation signal (0.3--0.6 keV/MeV depending on
light collection conditions) and high radiopurity (Th and Ra
activities are below a few Bq/kg), comparable to the best reported results
of low-temperature detectors based on LiMoO with natural or
Mo-enriched molybdenum content. Prospects of
LiMoO bolometers for use in rare-event search
experiments are briefly discussed.Comment: Prepared for submission to MDPI Sensors; 16 pages, 7 figures, and 3
table
- …