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25–28 Mar 2020
UCLA
US/Pacific timezone

Scintillation yield from electronic and nuclear recoils in superfluid helium-4

27 Mar 2020, 14:00
15m
PAB- 1-425 (UCLA)

PAB- 1-425

UCLA

UCLA Department of Physics and Astronomy 475 Portola Plaza, Los Angeles, CA 90095
Talk Non-directional direct dark matter detection Session 13

Speaker

Junsong Lin (University of California Berkeley)

Description

Superfluid He-4 is a promising target material for direct detection of light (< 1 GeV) dark matter. Signal channels for dark matter - nucleus interactions in superfluid helium include prompt photons, triplet excimers, rotons and phonons, but measurement of these signal strengths have yet to be performed for low energy nuclear recoils. A measurement of the prompt scintillation yield from electronic and nuclear recoils was carried out in superfluid He-4 at ~1.75 Kelvin, with deposited energy in the range of 10-1000 keV. The scintillation from a 16 cubic cm volume of superfluid He-4, with tetraphenyl butadiene as wavelength shifter deposited on 1-mm thick quartz panels, was read out by six R8520-06 MOD PMTs immersed in the superfluid, each individually biased by a Cockcroft-Walton generator. Elastic scattering of 2.8 MeV neutrons (generated by a deuterium-deuterium neutron generator) from superfluid He-4, with a liquid organic scintillator module used as far-side detector, was used to determine the scintillation signal yield for a variety of nuclear recoil energies. For comparison, Compton scattering of Cs-137 gamma-rays with the superfluid He-4, with NaI scintillators used as far-side detectors, was used to determine the scintillation signal yield of electronic recoils.

Primary authors

Junsong Lin (University of California Berkeley) Ethan Bernard (University of California, Berkeley) Ms Madeline Bernstein (University of California, Berkeley) Andreas Biekert (University of California, Berkeley) Scott Hertel Scott Kravitz (Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory) Daniel Mckinsey Mr Pratyush Patel (University of Massachusetts Amherst) Harold Pinckney (University of Massachusetts at Amherst) Mr Roger Romani (University of California, Berkeley) Alessandro Serafin (University of Massachusetts) Mr Ryan Smith (University of California, Berkeley) Dr Burkhant Suerfu (University of California, Berkeley) Vetri Velan (University of California, Berkeley) Mr Lanqing Yuan (University of California, Berkeley)

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