7 research outputs found
Detection prospects for the second-order weak decays of Xe in multi-tonne xenon time projection chambers
We investigate the detection prospects for two-neutrino and neutrinoless
second order weak decays of Xe -- double electron capture
(), electron capture with positron emission
() and double-positron emission
() -- in multi-tonne xenon time projection chambers. We
simulate the decays in a liquid xenon medium and develop a reconstruction
algorithm which uses the multi-particle coincidence in these decays to separate
signal from background. This is used to compute the expected detection
efficiencies as a function of position resolution and energy threshold for
planned experiments. In addition, we consider an exhaustive list of possible
background sources and find that they are either negligible in rate or can be
greatly reduced using our topological reconstruction criteria. In particular,
we draw two conclusions: First, with a half-life of
, the
decay of Xe will likely be detected in upcoming
Dark Matter experiments (e.g. XENONnT or LZ), and their major background will
be from gamma rays in the detector construction materials. Second, searches for
the decay mode are likely to be background-free, and new
parameter space may be within the reach. To this end we investigate three
different scenarios of existing experimental constraints on the effective
neutrino mass. The necessary 500 kg-year exposure of Xe could be
achieved by the baseline design of the DARWIN observatory, or by extracting and
using the Xe from the tailings of the nEXO experiment. We demonstrate
how a combination of Xe results with those from
searches in Xe could help to identify the neutrinoless decay mechanism.Comment: 17 pages, 7 figures
222Rn emanation measurements for the XENON1T experiment
The selection of low-radioactive construction materials is of utmost importance for the success of low-energy rare event search experiments. Besides radioactive contaminants in the bulk, the emanation of radioactive radon atoms from material surfaces attains increasing relevance in the effort to further reduce the background of such experiments. In this work, we present the 222Rn emanation measurements performed for the XENON1T dark matter experiment. Together with the bulk impurity screening campaign, the results enabled us to select the radio-purest construction materials, targeting a 222Rn activity concentration of 10μBq/kg in 3.2t of xenon. The knowledge of the distribution of the 222Rn sources allowed us to selectively eliminate problematic components in the course of the experiment. The predictions from the emanation measurements were compared to data of the 222Rn activity concentration in XENON1T. The final 222Rn activity concentration of (4.5±0.1)μBq/kg in the target of XENON1T is the lowest ever achieved in a xenon dark matter experiment
Searching for Heavy Dark Matter near the Planck Mass with XENON1T
Multiple viable theoretical models predict heavy dark matter particles with a mass close to the Planck mass, a range relatively unexplored by current experimental measurements. We use 219.4 days of data collected with the XENON1T experiment to conduct a blind search for signals from multiply interacting massive particles (MIMPs). Their unique track signature allows a targeted analysis with only 0.05 expected background events from muons. Following unblinding, we observe no signal candidate events. This Letter places strong constraints on spin-independent interactions of dark matter particles with a mass between 1×10 and 2×10  GeV/c. In addition, we present the first exclusion limits on spin-dependent MIMP-neutron and MIMP-proton cross sections for dark matter particles with masses close to the Planck scale
Search for Coherent Elastic Scattering of Solar B8 Neutrinos in the XENON1T Dark Matter Experiment
We report on a search for nuclear recoil signals from solar 8B neutrinos elastically scattering off xenon nuclei in XENON1T data, lowering the energy threshold from 2.6 to 1.6  keV. We develop a variety of novel techniques to limit the resulting increase in backgrounds near the threshold. No significant 8B neutrinolike excess is found in an exposure of 0.6  t×y. For the first time, we use the nondetection of solar neutrinos to constrain the light yield from 1–2 keV nuclear recoils in liquid xenon, as well as nonstandard neutrino-quark interactions. Finally, we improve upon world-leading constraints on dark matter-nucleus interactions for dark matter masses between 3 and 11  GeV c−2 by as much as an order of magnitude
Search for inelastic scattering of WIMP dark matter in XENON1T
We report the results of a search for the inelastic scattering of weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPs) in the XENON1T dark matter experiment. Scattering off 129Xe is the most sensitive probe of inelastic WIMP interactions, with a signature of a 39.6 keV deexcitation photon detected simultaneously with the nuclear recoil. Using an exposure of 0.83 tonne-years, we find no evidence of inelastic WIMP scattering with a significance of more than 2σ. A profile-likelihood ratio analysis is used to set upper limits on the cross section of WIMP-nucleus interactions. We exclude new parameter space for WIMPs heavier than 100  GeV/c2, with the strongest upper limit of 3.3×10−39  cm2 for 130  GeV/c2 WIMPs at 90% confidence level
Detector signal characterization with a Bayesian network in XENONnT
We report on the first search for nuclear recoils from dark matter in the form of weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPs) with the XENONnT experiment, which is based on a two-phase time projection chamber with a sensitive liquid xenon mass of 5.9 ton. During the (1.09±0.03)  ton yr exposure used for this search, the intrinsic 85Kr and 222Rn concentrations in the liquid target are reduced to unprecedentedly low levels, giving an electronic recoil background rate of (15.8±1.3)  events/ton yr keV in the region of interest. A blind analysis of nuclear recoil events with energies between 3.3 and 60.5 keV finds no significant excess. This leads to a minimum upper limit on the spin-independent WIMP-nucleon cross section of 2.58×10−47  cm2 for a WIMP mass of 28  GeV/c2 at 90% confidence level. Limits for spin-dependent interactions are also provided. Both the limit and the sensitivity for the full range of WIMP masses analyzed here improve on previous results obtained with the XENON1T experiment for the same exposure