Abstract

We present measurements of radioactive contamination in the high-resistivity silicon charge-coupled devices (CCDs) used by the DAMIC experiment to search for dark matter particles. Novel analysis methods, which exploit the unique spatial resolution of CCDs, were developed to identify α\alpha and β\beta particles. Uranium and thorium contamination in the CCD bulk was measured through α\alpha spectroscopy, with an upper limit on the 238^{238}U (232^{232}Th) decay rate of 5 (15) kg1^{-1} d1^{-1} at 95% CL. We also searched for pairs of spatially correlated electron tracks separated in time by up to tens of days, as expected from 32^{32}Si-32^{32}P or 210^{210}Pb-210^{210}Bi sequences of β\beta decays. The decay rate of 32^{32}Si was found to be 8065+11080^{+110}_{-65} kg1^{-1} d1^{-1} (95% CI). An upper limit of \sim35 kg1^{-1} d1^{-1} (95% CL) on the 210^{210}Pb decay rate was obtained independently by α\alpha spectroscopy and the β\beta decay sequence search. These levels of radioactive contamination are sufficiently low for the successful operation of CCDs in the forthcoming 100 g DAMIC detector.Comment: 18 pages, 20 figure

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