113 research outputs found

    First Calorimetric Measurement of OI-line in the Electron Capture Spectrum of 163^{163}Ho

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    The isotope 163^{163}Ho undergoes an electron capture process with a recommended value for the energy available to the decay, QECQ_{\rm EC}, of about 2.5 keV. According to the present knowledge, this is the lowest QECQ_{\rm EC} value for electron capture processes. Because of that, 163^{163}Ho is the best candidate to perform experiments to investigate the value of the electron neutrino mass based on the analysis of the calorimetrically measured spectrum. We present for the first time the calorimetric measurement of the atomic de-excitation of the 163^{163}Dy daughter atom upon the capture of an electron from the 5s shell in 163^{163}Ho, OI-line. The measured peak energy is 48 eV. This measurement was performed using low temperature metallic magnetic calorimeters with the 163^{163}Ho ion implanted in the absorber. We demonstrate that the calorimetric spectrum of 163^{163}Ho can be measured with high precision and that the parameters describing the spectrum can be learned from the analysis of the data. Finally, we discuss the implications of this result for the Electron Capture 163^{163}Ho experiment, ECHo, aiming to reach sub-eV sensitivity on the electron neutrino mass by a high precision and high statistics calorimetric measurement of the 163^{163}Ho spectrum.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure

    A pulsed, mono-energetic and angular-selective UV photo-electron source for the commissioning of the KATRIN experiment

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    The KATRIN experiment aims to determine the neutrino mass scale with a sensitivity of 200 meV/c^2 (90% C.L.) by a precision measurement of the shape of the tritium β\beta-spectrum in the endpoint region. The energy analysis of the decay electrons is achieved by a MAC-E filter spectrometer. To determine the transmission properties of the KATRIN main spectrometer, a mono-energetic and angular-selective electron source has been developed. In preparation for the second commissioning phase of the main spectrometer, a measurement phase was carried out at the KATRIN monitor spectrometer where the device was operated in a MAC-E filter setup for testing. The results of these measurements are compared with simulations using the particle-tracking software "Kassiopeia", which was developed in the KATRIN collaboration over recent years.Comment: 19 pages, 16 figures, submitted to European Physical Journal

    Characterization of low temperature metallic magnetic calorimeters having gold absorbers with implanted 163^{163}Ho ions

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    For the first time we have investigated the behavior of fully micro-fabricated low temperature metallic magnetic calorimeters (MMCs) after undergoing an ion-implantation process. This experiment had the aim to show the possibility to perform a high precision calorimetric measurement of the energy spectrum following the electron capture of 163^{163}Ho using MMCs having the radioactive 163^{163}Ho ions implanted in the absorber. The implantation of 163^{163}Ho ions was performed at ISOLDE-CERN. The performance of a detector that underwent an ion-implantation process is compared to the one of a detector without implanted ions. The results show that the implantation dose of ions used in this experiment does not compromise the properties of the detector. In addition an optimized detector design for future 163^{163}Ho experiments is presented

    The Electron Capture 163^{163}Ho Experiment ECHo: an overview

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    The determination of the absolute scale of the neutrino masses is one of the most challenging present questions in particle physics. The most stringent limit, m(νˉe)<2m(\bar{\nu}_{\mathrm{e}})<2eV, was achieved for the electron anti-neutrino mass \cite{numass}. Different approaches are followed to achieve a sensitivity on neutrino masses in the sub-eV range. Among them, experiments exploring the beta decay or electron capture of suitable nuclides can provide information on the electron neutrino mass value. We present the Electron Capture 163^{163}Ho experiment ECHo, which aims to investigate the electron neutrino mass in the sub-eV range by means of the analysis of the calorimetrically measured energy spectrum following electron capture of 163^{163}Ho. A high precision and high statistics spectrum will be measured with arrays of metallic magnetic calorimeters. We discuss some of the essential aspects of ECHo to reach the proposed sensitivity: detector optimization and performance, multiplexed readout, 163^{163}Ho source production and purification, as well as a precise theoretical and experimental parameterization of the calorimetric EC spectrum including in particular the value of QECQ_{\mathrm{EC}}. We present preliminary results obtained with a first prototype of single channel detectors as well as a first 64-pixel chip with integrated micro-wave SQUID multiplexer, which will already allow to investigate m(νe)m(\nu_{\mathrm{e}}) in the eV range.Comment: Contribution to the LTD15 Conference Proceeding

    KATRIN background due to surface radioimpurities

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    The goal of the KArlsruhe TRItrium Neutrino (KATRIN) experiment is the determination of the effective electron antineutrino mass with a sensitivity of 0.2 eV/c2^{2} at 90 % C.L.1^{1}. This goal can only be achieved with a very low background level in the order of 10 mcps2^{2} in the detector region of interest. A possible background source are α-decays on the inner surface of the KATRIN Main Spectrometer. Rydberg atoms, produced in sputtering processes accompanying the α-decays, are not influenced by electric or magnetic fields and freely propagate inside the vacuum of the Main Spectrometer. Here, they can be ionized by thermal radiation and the released electrons directly contribute to the KATRIN background. Two α-sources, 223^{223}Ra and 228^{228}Th, were installed at the Main Spectrometer with the purpose of temporarily increasing the background in order to study α-decay induced background processes. In this paper, we present a possible background generation mechanism and measurements performed with these two radioactive sources. Our results show a clear correlation between α-activity on the inner spectrometer surface and background from the volume of the spectrometer. Two key characteristics of the Main Spectrometer background – the dependency on the inner electrode offset potential, and the radial distribution – could be reproduced with this artificially induced background. These findings indicate a high contribution of α-decay induced events to the residual KATRIN background

    The electron capture in 163^{163}Ho experiment – ECHo

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    Neutrinos, and in particular their tiny but non-vanishing masses, can be considered one of the doors towards physics beyond the Standard Model. Precision measurements of the kinematics of weak interactions, in particular of the 3^{3}H β-decay and the 163^{163}Ho electron capture (EC), represent the only model independent approach to determine the absolute scale of neutrino masses. The electron capture in 163^{163}Ho experiment, ECHo, is designed to reach sub-eV sensitivity on the electron neutrino mass by means of the analysis of the calorimetrically measured electron capture spectrum of the nuclide 163^{163}Ho. The maximum energy available for this decay, about 2.8 keV, constrains the type of detectors that can be used. Arrays of low temperature metallic magnetic calorimeters (MMCs) are being developed to measure the 163^{163}Ho EC spectrum with energy resolution below 3 eV FWHM and with a time resolution below 1 μs. To achieve the sub-eV sensitivity on the electron neutrino mass, together with the detector optimization, the availability of large ultra-pure 163^{163}Ho samples, the identification and suppression of background sources as well as the precise parametrization of the 163^{163}Ho EC spectrum are of utmost importance. The high-energy resolution 163^{163}Ho spectra measured with the first MMC prototypes with ion-implanted 163^{163}Ho set the basis for the ECHo experiment. We describe the conceptual design of ECHo and motivate the strategies we have adopted to carry on the present medium scale experiment, ECHo-1K. In this experiment, the use of 1 kBq 163^{163}Ho will allow to reach a neutrino mass sensitivity below 10 eV/c2^{2}. We then discuss how the results being achieved in ECHo-1k will guide the design of the next stage of the ECHo experiment, ECHo-1M, where a source of the order of 1 MBq 163^{163}Ho embedded in large MMCs arrays will allow to reach sub-eV sensitivity on the electron neutrino mass
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