199 research outputs found
Calibrated in-vacuum quantum efficiency system for metallic and III-V thin-film photocathodes
The construction and calibration of a high vacuum system for thin film growth and in situ quantum efficiency (QE) measurement are described. Surface cleaning by in situ argon ion sputtering and annealing is supported. The QE measurement is based on an external 265 nm LED and in situ positively biased collector grid. The system is applied to two metallic and two semiconducting photocathodes: polycrystalline silver and copper, and single crystal InP and InSb. Surface cleaning protocols are shown to have a dramatic effect on the QE for all of these materials. The maximum QE values achieved for clean InSb and InP are around 8 × 10−5, for Cu 9 × 10−5 and for Ag 2 × 10−4
Implementation of a local principal curves algorithm for neutrino interaction reconstruction in a liquid argon volume
A local principal curve algorithm has been implemented in three dimensions
for automated track and shower reconstruction of neutrino interactions in a
liquid argon time projection chamber. We present details of the algorithm and
characterise its performance on simulated data sets.Comment: 14 pages, 17 figures; typing correction to Eq 5, the definition of
the local covariance matri
Electron-hadron shower discrimination in a liquid argon time projection chamber
By exploiting structural differences between electromagnetic and hadronic showers in a multivariate analysis we present an efficient Electron-Hadron discrimination algorithm for liquid argon time projection chambers, validated using Geant4 simulated data
The CRESST Experiment: Recent Results and Prospects
The CRESST experiment seeks hypothetical WIMP particles that could account
for the bulk of dark matter in the Universe. The detectors are cryogenic
calorimeters in which WIMPs would scatter elastically on nuclei, releasing
phonons. The first phase of the experiment has successfully deployed several
262 g sapphire devices in the Gran Sasso underground laboratories. A main
source of background has been identified as microscopic mechanical fracturing
of the crystals, and has been eliminated, improving the background rate by up
to three orders of magnitude at low energies, leaving a rate close to one count
per day per kg and per keV above 10 keV recoil energy. This background now
appears to be dominated by radioactivity, and future CRESST scintillating
calorimeters which simultaneously measure light and phonons will allow
rejection of a great part of it.Comment: To appear in the proceedings of the CAPP2000 Conference, Verbier,
Switzerland, July, 2000 (eds J. Garcia-Bellido, R. Durrer, and M.
Shaposhnikov
The CRESST Dark Matter Search
We present first competitive results on WIMP dark matter using the
phonon-light-detection technique. A particularly strong limit for WIMPs with
coherent scattering results from selecting a region of the phonon-light plane
corresponding to tungsten recoils. The observed count rate in the neutron band
is compatible with the rate expected from neutron background. CRESST is
presently being upgraded with a 66 channel SQUID readout system, a neutron
shield and a muon veto system. This results in a significant improvement in
sensitivity.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, to be published in the proceedings of the 5th
International Workshop on the Identification and Detection of Dark Matter IDM
2004, Edinburgh, Sept. 2004, World Scientifi
Detection of the Natural Alpha Decay of Tungsten
The natural alpha decay of 180W has been unambiguously detected for the first
time. The alpha peak is found in a (gamma,beta and neutron)-free background
spectrum. This has been achieved by the simultaneous measurement of phonon and
light signals with the CRESST cryogenic detectors. A half-life of T1/2 = (1.8
+- 0.2) x 10^18 y and an energy release of Q = (2516.4 +- 1.1 (stat.) +- 1.2
(sys.)) keV have been measured. New limits are also set on the half-lives of
the other naturally occurring tungsten isotopes.Comment: Submitted to Physical Review C Revised versio
High-purity germanium detector ionization pulse shapes of nuclear recoils, gamma interactions and microphonism
Nuclear recoil measurements with high-purity Germanium detectors are very
promising to directly detect dark matter candidates. The main background
sources in such experiments are natural radioactivity and microphonic noise.
Digital pulse shape analysis is an encouraging approach to reduce the
background originating from the latter. To study the pulse shapes of nuclear
recoil events we performed a neutron scattering experiment, which covered the
ionization energy range from 20 to 80 keV. We have measured ionization
efficiencies as well and found an excellent agreement with the theory of
Lindhard. In a further experiment we measured pulse shapes of a radioactive
gamma-source and found no difference to nuclear recoil pulse shapes. Pulse
shapes originating from microphonics of a HPGe-detector are presented for the
first time. A microphonic noise suppression method, crucial for dark matter
direct detection experiments, can therefore be calibrated with pulse shapes
from gamma-sources.Comment: 11 pages (latex) including 6 postscript figures and 2 table
New limits on dark--matter WIMPs from the Heidelberg--Moscow experiment
New results after 0.69 kg yr of measurement with an enriched 76Ge detector of
the Heidelberg--Moscow experiment with an active mass of 2.758 kg are
presented. An energy threshold of 9 keV and a background level of 0.042
counts/(kg d keV) in the energy region between 15 keV and 40 keV was
reached.The derived limits on the WIMP--nucleon cross section are the most
stringent limits on spin--independent interactions obtained to date by using
essentially raw data without background subtraction.Comment: 8 pages (latex) including 5 postscript figures and 2 tables. To
appear in Phys. Rev. D, 15. December 199
- …