22 research outputs found
Detecting the Upturn of the Solar B Neutrino Spectrum with LENA
LENA (Low Energy Neutrino Astronomy) has been proposed as a next generation
50 kt liquid scintillator detector. The large target mass allows a high
precision measurement of the solar B neutrino spectrum, with an
unprecedented energy threshold of 2 MeV. Hence, it can probe the MSW-LMA
prediction for the electron neutrino survival probability in the transition
region between vacuum and matter-dominated neutrino oscillations. Based on
Monte Carlo simulations of the solar neutrino and the corresponding background
spectra, it was found that the predicted upturn of the solar B neutrino
spectrum can be detected with 5 sigma significance after 5 y
Search for modulations of the solar Be-7 flux in the next-generation neutrino observatory LENA
A next-generation liquid-scintillator detector will be able to perform
high-statistics measurements of the solar neutrino flux. In LENA, solar Be-7
neutrinos are expected to cause 1.7x10^4 electron recoil events per day in a
fiducial volume of 35 kilotons. Based on this signal, a search for periodic
modulations on sub-percent level can be conducted, surpassing the sensitivity
of current detectors by at least a factor of 20. The range of accessible
periods reaches from several minutes, corresponding to modulations induced by
helioseismic g-modes, to tens of years, allowing to study long-term changes in
solar fusion rates.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figure
A Low Nuclear Recoil Energy Threshold for Dark Matter Search with CRESST-III Detectors
The CRESST-III experiment (Cryogenic Rare Events Search with Superconducting Thermometers), located at the underground facility Laboratori Nazionali del Gran Sasso in Italy, uses scintillating CaWO₄ crystals as cryogenic calorimeters to search for direct dark matter interactions in detectors. A large part of the parameter space for spin-independent scattering off nuclei remains untested for dark matter particles with masses below a few GeV/c², despite many naturally motivated theoretical models for light dark matter particles. The CRESST-III detectors are designed to achieve the performance required to probe the low-mass region of the parameter space with a sensitivity never reached before. In this paper, new results on the performance and an overview of the CRESST-III detectors will be presented, emphasizing the results about the low-energy threshold for nuclear recoil of CRESST-III Phase 1 which started collecting data in August 2016. Keywords: Cryogenic detectors; Dark matter; Rare-event searche
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Borexino : geo-neutrino measurement at Gran Sasso, Italy
Geo-neutrinos, electron anti-neutrinos produced in beta-decays of naturally occurring radioactive isotopes in the Earth, are a unique direct probe of our planet's interior. After a brief introduction of the geo-neutrinos' properties and of the main aims of their study, we discuss the features of a detector which has recently provided breakthrough achievements in the field, Borexino, a massive, calorimetric liquid scintillator detector installed at the underground Gran Sasso Laboratory. With its unprecedented radiopurity levels achieved in the core of the detection medium, it is the only experiment in operation able to study in real time solar neutrino interactions in the challenging sub-MeV energy region. Its superior technical properties allowed Borexino also to provide a clean detection of terrestrial neutrinos. Therefore, the description of the characteristics of the detected geo-neutrino signal and of the corresponding geological implications are the main core of the discussion contained in this work
Present Status of Astronomical Education Using the Internet and PC in Germany
In 1998 the Hands on Universe project was started in Germany. Teachers from 23 schools in Bavaria attended the first Hands on Universe workshop held at the Maria Theresia Gymnasium in Munich. The workshop was organized
and held by scientists from the 'Sonderforschungsbereich Astro-Teilchen-Physik' (Center for Astro-Particle-Pysics) an organization which combines research from the two universities at Munich and several Max-Planck-Institutes. We hope this workshop is the beginning of a collaboration of schools and research institutions in astronomical and scientific education. The internet is the tool for the communication and the exchange of data
Sonderforschungsbereich 375 - Research in Particle-Astrophysics. Proceedings of a workshop held October 16-19,1996 at Ringberg Castle, Tegernsee, Germany
SIGLEAvailable from TIB Hannover / FIZ - Fachinformationszzentrum Karlsruhe / TIB - Technische InformationsbibliothekDEGerman