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 and β
particles. Uranium and thorium contamination in the CCD bulk was measured
through α spectroscopy, with an upper limit on the 238U
(232Th) decay rate of 5 (15) kg−1 d−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 32Si-32P or
210Pb-210Bi sequences of β decays. The decay rate of 32Si
was found to be 80−65+110 kg−1 d−1 (95% CI). An upper limit
of ∼35 kg−1 d−1 (95% CL) on the 210Pb decay rate was
obtained independently by α spectroscopy and the β 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