A 30-g xenon bubble chamber, operated at Northwestern University in June and
November 2016, has for the first time observed simultaneous bubble nucleation
and scintillation by nuclear recoils in a superheated liquid. This chamber is
instrumented with a CCD camera for near-IR bubble imaging, a solar-blind
photomultiplier tube to detect 175-nm xenon scintillation light, and a
piezoelectric acoustic transducer to detect the ultrasonic emission from a
growing bubble. The time of nucleation determined from the acoustic signal is
used to correlate specific scintillation pulses with bubble-nucleating events.
We report on data from this chamber for thermodynamic "Seitz" thresholds from
4.2 to 15.0 keV. The observed single- and multiple-bubble rates when exposed to
a 252Cf neutron source indicate that, for an 8.3-keV thermodynamic
threshold, the minimum nuclear recoil energy required to nucleate a bubble is
19±6 keV (1σ uncertainty). This is consistent with the observed
scintillation spectrum for bubble-nucleating events. We see no evidence for
bubble nucleation by gamma rays at any of the thresholds studied, setting a 90%
C.L. upper limit of 6.3×10−7 bubbles per gamma interaction at a
4.2-keV thermodynamic threshold. This indicates stronger gamma discrimination
than in CF3I bubble chambers, supporting the hypothesis that scintillation
production suppresses bubble nucleation by electron recoils while nuclear
recoils nucleate bubbles as usual. These measurements establish the
noble-liquid bubble chamber as a promising new technology for the detection of
weakly interacting massive particle dark matter and coherent elastic
neutrino-nucleus scattering.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures. Published versio