27 research outputs found
Quenching Factor for Low Energy Nuclear Recoils in a Plastic Scintillator
Plastic scintillators are widely used in industry, medicine and scientific
research, including nuclear and particle physics. Although one of their most
common applications is in neutron detection, experimental data on their
response to low-energy nuclear recoils are scarce. Here, the relative
scintillation efficiency for neutron-induced nuclear recoils in a
polystyrene-based plastic scintillator (UPS-923A) is presented, exploring
recoil energies between 125 keV and 850 keV. Monte Carlo simulations,
incorporating light collection efficiency and energy resolution effects, are
used to generate neutron scattering spectra which are matched to observed
distributions of scintillation signals to parameterise the energy-dependent
quenching factor. At energies above 300 keV the dependence is reasonably
described using the semi-empirical formulation of Birks and a kB factor of
(0.014+/-0.002) g/MeVcm^2 has been determined. Below that energy the measured
quenching factor falls more steeply than predicted by the Birks formalism.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figure
Advances in Cryogenic Avalanche Detectors
Cryogenic Avalanche Detectors (CRADs) are referred to as a new class of
noble-gas detectors operated at cryogenic temperatures with electron
avalanching performed directly in the detection medium, the latter being in
gaseous, liquid or two-phase (liquid-gas) state. Electron avalanching is
provided by Micro-Pattern Gas Detector (MPGD) multipliers, in particular GEMs
and THGEMs, operated at cryogenic temperatures in dense noble gases. The final
goal for this kind of detectors is the development of large-volume detectors of
ultimate sensitivity for rare-event experiments and medical applications, such
as coherent neutrino-nucleus scattering, direct dark matter search,
astrophysical (solar and supernova) neutrino detection experiments and Positron
Emission Tomography technique. This review is the first attempt to summarize
the results on CRAD performances obtained by different groups. A brief overview
of the available CRAD concepts is also given and the most remarkable CRAD
physics effects are discussed.Comment: 60 pages, 58 figures. Invited talk at MPGD2011 Conference, Aug 29 -
Sep 3, 2011, Kobe, Japan. Journal version + Fig. 1a adde
The ZEPLIN-III dark matter detector: performance study using an end-to-end simulation tool
We present results from a GEANT4-based Monte Carlo tool for end-to-end
simulations of the ZEPLIN-III dark matter experiment. ZEPLIN-III is a two-phase
detector which measures both the scintillation light and the ionisation charge
generated in liquid xenon by interacting particles and radiation. The software
models the instrument response to radioactive backgrounds and calibration
sources, including the generation, ray-tracing and detection of the primary and
secondary scintillations in liquid and gaseous xenon, and subsequent processing
by data acquisition electronics. A flexible user interface allows easy
modification of detector parameters at run time. Realistic datasets can be
produced to help with data analysis, an example of which is the position
reconstruction algorithm developed from simulated data. We present a range of
simulation results confirming the original design sensitivity of a few times
pb to the WIMP-nucleon cross-section.Comment: Submitted to Astroparticle Physic
Preliminary results on position reconstruction for ZEPLIN III
ZEPLIN III is a two-phase xenon detector for direct dark matter search that will look for rare nuclear recoils from elastic scattering of Weakly Interacting Massive Particles off xenon atoms. ZEPLIN III measures both the scintillation and ionisation signals produced in the liquid by the interacting particle. The prompt scintillation is detected by an array of 31 photomultipliers (PM) immersed in the liquid, and a strong electric field extracts the ionisation electrons to the vapour phase. Electroluminescence photons are produced in the gas and detected by the same PM array. In this paper we describe position reconstruction methods that use both these signals to achieve a position accuracy of a few millimetres in the horizontal plane and sub-millimetre in the vertical coordinate.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6TJM-4MD310K-D/1/a5d0b57794dcd67b6d2dd09a098299d
A model for the secondary scintillation pulse shape from a gas proportional scintillation counter
Proportional scintillation counters (PSCs), both single- and dual-phase, can measure the scintillation (S1) and ionization (S2) channels from particle interactions within the detector volume. The signal obtained from these detectors depends first on the physics of the medium (the initial scintillation and ionization), and second how the physics of the detector manipulates the resulting photons and liberated electrons. In this paper we develop a model of the detector physics that incorporates event topology, detector geometry, electric field configuration, purity, optical properties of components, and wavelength shifters. We present an analytic form of the model, which allows for general study of detector design and operation, and a Monte Carlo model which enables a more detailed exploration of S2 events. This model may be used to study systematic effects in current detectors such as energy and position reconstruction, pulse shape discrimination, event topology, dead time calculations, purity, and electric field uniformity. We present a comparison of this model with experimental data collected with an argon gas proportional scintillation counter (GPSC), operated at 20 C and 1 bar, and irradiated with an internal, collimated 55Fe source. Additionally we discuss how the model may be incorporated in Monte Carlo simulations of both GPSCs and dual-phase detectors, increasing the reliability of the simulation results and allowing for tests of the experimental data analysis algorithms