19 research outputs found
Direction-sensitive dark matter search results in a surface laboratory
We developed a three-dimensional gaseous tracking device and performed a
direction-sensitive dark matter search in a surface laboratory. By using 150
Torr carbon-tetrafluoride (CF_4 gas), we obtained a sky map drawn with the
recoil directions of the carbon and fluorine nuclei, and set the first limit on
the spin-dependent WIMP (Weakly Interacting Massive Particles)-proton cross
section by a direction-sensitive method. Thus, we showed that a WIMP-search
experiment with a gaseous tracking device can actually set limits. Furthermore,
we demonstrated that this method will potentially play a certain role in
revealing the nature of dark matter when a low-background large-volume detector
is developed.Comment: 9 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Lett.
Performance of a Time-Projection-Chamber with a Large-Area Micro-Pixel-Chamber Readout
A micro time-projection-chamber (micro-TPC) with a detection volume of
23*28*31 cm^3 was developed, and its fundamental performance was examined. The
micro-TPC consists of a micro pixel chamber with a detection area of 31*31 cm^2
as a two-dimensional imaging device and a gas electron multiplier with an
effective area of 23*28 cm^2 as a pre-gas-multiplier. The micro-TPC was
operated at a gas gain of 50,000, and energy resolutions and spatial
resolutions were measured.Comment: 4 pages, 7 figures, proceedings of IWORID
First underground results with NEWAGE-0.3a direction-sensitive dark matter detector
A direction-sensitive dark matter search experiment at Kamioka underground
laboratory with the NEWAGE-0.3a detector was performed. The NEWAGE- 0.3a
detector is a gaseous micro-time-projection chamber filled with CF4 gas at 152
Torr. The fiducial volume and target mass are 20*25*31 cm3 and 0.0115 kg,
respectively. With an exposure of 0.524 kgdays, improved spin-dependent weakly
interacting massive particle (WIMP)-proton cross section limits by a
direction-sensitive method were achieved including a new record of 5400 pb for
150 GeV/c2 WIMPs. We studied the remaining background and found that ambient
gamma-rays contributed about one-fifth of the remaining background and
radioactive contaminants inside the gas chamber contributed the rest.Comment: 21 pages, 8 figures, to appear in Physics Letters
Development of an atmospheric Cherenkov imaging camera for the CANGAROO-III experiment
A Cherenkov imaging camera for the CANGAROO-III experiment has been developed
for observations of gamma-ray induced air-showers at energies from 10 to
10 eV. The camera consists of 427 pixels, arranged in a hexagonal shape
at 0.17 intervals, each of which is a 3/4-inch diameter photomultiplier
module with a Winston-cone--shaped light guide. The camera was designed to have
a large dynamic range of signal linearity, a wider field of view, and an
improvement in photon collection efficiency compared with the CANGAROO-II
camera. The camera, and a number of the calibration experiments made to test
its performance, are described in detail in this paper.Comment: 25 pages, 29 figures, elsart.cls, to appear in NIM-
Electron-tracking Compton camera imaging of technetium-95m.
Imaging was conducted using an electron tracking-Compton camera (ETCC), which measures γ-rays with energies in the range of 200-900 keV from 95mTc. 95mTc was produced by the 95Mo(p, n)95mTc reaction on a 95Mo-enriched target. A method for recycling 95Mo-enriched molybdenum trioxide was employed, and the recycled yield of 95Mo was 70%-90%. Images were obtained with the gate of three energies. The results showed that the spatial resolution increases with increasing γ-ray energy, and suggested that the ETCC with high-energy γ-ray emitters such as 95mTc is useful for the medical imaging of deep tissue and organs in the human body