19 research outputs found
Subsurface cosmogenic and radiogenic production of ^{42}Ar
Radioactive decays from ^{42}Ar and its progeny ^{42}K are potential
background sources in large-scale liquid-argon-based neutrino and dark matter
experiments. In the atmosphere, ^{42}Ar is produced primarily by cosmogenic
activation on ^{40}Ar. The use of low radioactivity argon from cosmogenically
shielded underground sources can expand the reach and sensitivity of
liquid-argon-based rare event searches. We estimate ^{42}Ar production
underground by nuclear reactions induced by natural radioactivity and
cosmic-ray muon-induced interactions. At 3,000 mwe, ^{42}Ar production rate is
1.8E-3 atoms per ton of crust per year, 7 orders of magnitude smaller than the
^{39}Ar production rate at a similar depth in the crust. By comparing the
calculated production rate of ^{42}Ar to that of ^{39}Ar for which the
concentration has been measured in an underground gas sample, we estimate the
activity of ^{42}Ar in gas extracted from 3,000 mwe depth to be less than 2
decays per ton of argon per year.Comment: 17 pages, 10 figure
Impact of ionizing radiation on superconducting qubit coherence
The practical viability of any qubit technology stands on long coherence
times and high-fidelity operations, with the superconducting qubit modality
being a leading example. However, superconducting qubit coherence is impacted
by broken Cooper pairs, referred to as quasiparticles, with a density that is
empirically observed to be orders of magnitude greater than the value predicted
for thermal equilibrium by the Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer (BCS) theory of
superconductivity. Previous work has shown that infrared photons significantly
increase the quasiparticle density, yet even in the best isolated systems, it
still remains higher than expected, suggesting that another generation
mechanism exists. In this Letter, we provide evidence that ionizing radiation
from environmental radioactive materials and cosmic rays contributes to this
observed difference, leading to an elevated quasiparticle density that would
ultimately limit superconducting qubits of the type measured here to coherence
times in the millisecond regime. We further demonstrate that introducing
radiation shielding reduces the flux of ionizing radiation and positively
correlates with increased coherence time. Albeit a small effect for today's
qubits, reducing or otherwise mitigating the impact of ionizing radiation will
be critical for realizing fault-tolerant superconducting quantum computers.Comment: 16 pages, 12 figure
Dark sectors 2016 Workshop: community report
This report, based on the Dark Sectors workshop at SLAC in April 2016,
summarizes the scientific importance of searches for dark sector dark matter
and forces at masses beneath the weak-scale, the status of this broad
international field, the important milestones motivating future exploration,
and promising experimental opportunities to reach these milestones over the
next 5-10 years
Skipper-CCD Sensors for the Oscura Experiment: Requirements and Preliminary Tests
Oscura is a proposed multi-kg skipper-CCD experiment designed for a dark
matter (DM) direct detection search that will reach unprecedented sensitivity
to sub-GeV DM-electron interactions with its 10 kg detector array. Oscura is
planning to operate at SNOLAB with 2070 m overburden, and aims to reach a
background goal of less than one event in each electron bin in the 2-10
electron ionization-signal region for the full 30 kg-year exposure, with a
radiation background rate of 0.01 dru. In order to achieve this goal, Oscura
must address each potential source of background events, including instrumental
backgrounds. In this work, we discuss the main instrumental background sources
and the strategy to control them, establishing a set of constraints on the
sensors' performance parameters. We present results from the tests of the first
fabricated Oscura prototype sensors, evaluate their performance in the context
of the established constraints and estimate the Oscura instrumental background
based on these results
Early Science with the Oscura Integration Test
Oscura is a planned light-dark matter search experiment using Skipper-CCDs
with a total active mass of 10 kg. As part of the detector development, the
collaboration plans to build the Oscura Integration Test (OIT), an engineering
test experiment with 10% of the Oscura's total mass. Here we discuss the early
science opportunities with the OIT to search for millicharged particles (mCPs)
using the NuMI beam at Fermilab. mCPs would be produced at low energies through
photon-mediated processes from decays of scalar, pseudoscalar, and vector
mesons, or direct Drell-Yan productions. Estimates show that the OIT would be a
world-leading probe for low-mass mCPs.Comment: 21 pages, 13 figure
Demonstration of surface electron rejection with interleaved germanium detectors for dark matter searches
The following article appeared in Applied Physics Letters 103.16 (2013): 164105 and may be found at http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/apl/100/26/10.1063/1.4729825The SuperCDMS experiment in the Soudan Underground Laboratory searches for dark matter with a 9-kg array of cryogenic germanium detectors. Symmetric sensors on opposite sides measure both charge and phonons from each particle interaction, providing excellent discrimination between electron and nuclear recoils, and between surface and interior events. Surface event rejection capabilities were tested with two 210 Pb sources producing ∼130 beta decays/hr. In ∼800 live hours, no events leaked into the 8–115 keV signal region, giving upper limit leakage fraction 1.7 × 10−5 at 90% C.L., corresponding to < 0.6 surface event background in the future 200-kg SuperCDMS SNOLAB experiment.This work is supported in part by the National Science Foundation (Grant Nos. AST-9978911, NSF-0847342, PHY-1102795,NSF-1151869, PHY-0542066, PHY-0503729, PHY-0503629, PHY-0503641, PHY-0504224, PHY-0705052,PHY-0801708, PHY-0801712, PHY-0802575, PHY-0847342, PHY-0855299, PHY-0855525, and PHY-1205898), by the Department of Energy (Contract Nos. DE-AC03-76SF00098, DE-FG02-92ER40701, DE-FG02-94ER40823,DE-FG03-90ER40569, DE-FG03-91ER40618, and DESC0004022),by NSERC Canada (Grant Nos. SAPIN 341314 and SAPPJ 386399), and by MULTIDARK CSD2009-00064 and FPA2012-34694. Fermilab is operated by Fermi Research Alliance, LLC under Contract No. De-AC02-07CH11359, while SLAC is operated under Contract No. DE-AC02-76SF00515 with the United States Department of
Energy
Towards a Depleted Argon Time Projection Chamber WIMP Search: DarkSide Prototype Analysis and Predicted Sensitivity
Scientists have now accumulated overwhelming evidence indicating that over 80% of the mass of the universe is in the form of dark matter, neutral particles with ultra-weak couplings to ordinary matter. One compelling candidate is a Weakly Interacting Massive Particle or WIMP, with mass on the order of 100 GeV.The signal of a WIMP interaction in a detector is a low energy (typically below ~100 keV) recoiling atomic nucleus. The expected rate is at most a few interactions per year per ton of target. The most critical issue for direct WIMP searches is reducing the background in the detector below this very low rate. Argon is a promising target because measurements of the scintillation pulse shape and the scintillation-to-ionization ratio allow the reduction of gamma-induced signals, the largest source of background, by a factor of 108 or better. One of the major drawbacks of argon is the presence of radioactive 39Ar, which results in a decay rate of ~1 Bq/kg in natural argon. Because 39Ar is produced primarily in the upper atmosphere, the 39Ar fraction can be reduced significantly by obtaining the argon from underground wells.
Our collaboration, DarkSide, is developing a series of two-phase argon time projection
chambers (TPCs) utilizing this depleted argon, along with passive shielding and active neutron and muon vetoes, for WIMP searches. I present results from a recent campaign of a 10 kg active mass prototype TPC that demonstrate the successful realization of many of the technical aspects necessary for a full-scale detector, in particular an electron-equivalent light yield of 4.5 photoelectrons per keV deposited, and a free electron lifetime in excess of 200 microseconds. Based on this successful prototype and Monte Carlo simulations, I then conclude that DarkSide-50, a 50 kg active mass TPC to be installed in LNGS, can likely acquire data background-free for three years, accumulating a fiducial exposure of ~100 kg-years
and reaching a sensitivity to the WIMP-nucleon cross section of ~3×1045 cm2.
I also present some details on the analysis of Borexino data that resulted in the first
real-time, spectroscopic measurement of 7Be solar neutrino interactions