Electron Bubble Tracking Detector R&D

Similar documents
Two-phase and gaseous cryogenic avalanche detectors based on GEMs

arxiv:physics/ v2 27 Mar 2001

GEM operation in helium and neon at low temperatures

Two-phase argon and xenon avalanche detectors based on Gas Electron Multipliers

Particle Energy Loss in Matter

Measurements of liquid xenon s response to low-energy particle interactions

08 - Miscellaneous and historical detectors

Siberian Branch of Russian Academy of Science. A. Buzulutskov, A. Bondar, L. Shekhtman, R. Snopkov, Yu. Tikhonov

Particle Energy Loss in Matter

DarkSide. Bianca Bottino Università di Genova and INFN Sezione di Genova on behalf of the DarkSide collaboration 1

arxiv:astro-ph/ v1 15 Feb 2005

Optical readout of secondary scintillation from liquid argon generated by a thick gas electron multiplier

Distillation purification and radon assay of liquid xenon

X-ray ionization yields and energy spectra in liquid argon

Interaction of particles in matter

Direct dark matter search using liquid noble gases

Performance of high pressure Xe/TMA in GEMs for neutron and X-ray detection

David Caratelli & Angela Fava1

Laser Dissociation of Protonated PAHs

ATHENA / AD-1. First production and detection of cold antihydrogen atoms. ATHENA Collaboration. Rolf Landua CERN

ebubble: research and development for a low-energy solar neutrino

PHYS 3446 Lecture #12

DETECTORS. I. Charged Particle Detectors

The CONNIE experiment

Semiconductor X-Ray Detectors. Tobias Eggert Ketek GmbH

arxiv: v1 [physics.ins-det] 1 Nov 2011

Electron emission properties of two-phase argon and argon-nitrogen avalanche detectors

Chapter 4 Scintillation Detectors

BubXe: a liquid xenon bubble chamber for Dark Matter detection!

mean free path stopping power absorption coefficient detected recoil rate detected 0νββ events

In collaboration w/ G. Giudice, D. Kim, JCP, S. Shin arxiv: Jong-Chul Park. 2 nd IBS-KIAS Joint High1 January 08 (2018)

DARWIN: dark matter WIMP search with noble liquids

ebubble Research and Development Program

Chapter Seven (Nuclear Detectors)

Rn assay and distillation purification

Performance of the Gamma-ray Imaging Detector with Micro-TPC

DARWIN. Marc Schumann Physik Institut, Universität Zürich. Aspera Technology Forum 2010, October 21-22, 2010

arxiv: v1 [physics.ins-det] 5 Nov 2015

Neutron Structure Functions and a Radial Time Projection Chamber

Chap. 19 Miscellaneous Detectors

A Demonstration of Light Guides for Light Detection in Liquid Argon TPCs

A Triple-GEM Telescope for the TOTEM Experiment

NEXT ELECTROLUMINESCENCE READOUT

Search for low-mass WIMPs with Spherical Detectors : NEWS-LSM and NEWS-SNO

What detectors measure

Lecture 15: Optoelectronic devices: Introduction

PoS(idm2008)010. The PICASSO Dark Matter Search Project. A. Davour for the PICASSO collaboration Queen s University

Status Report: Multi-Channel TCT

arxiv: v1 [physics.ins-det] 3 Feb 2011

The ArDM Experiment. A Double Phase Argon Calorimeter and TPC for Direct Detection of Dark Matter

Paolo Agnes Laboratoire APC, Université Paris 7 on behalf of the DarkSide Collaboration. Dark Matter 2016 UCLA 17th - 19th February 2016

Applied Nuclear Physics (Fall 2006) Lecture 21 (11/29/06) Detection of Nuclear Radiation: Pulse Height Spectra

Chemistry Instrumental Analysis Lecture 8. Chem 4631

PMT Signal Attenuation and Baryon Number Violation Background Studies. By: Nadine Ayoub Nevis Laboratories, Columbia University August 5, 2011

Scin/lla/on of liquid neon Photon Detec/on at 27 K

The ArDM project: A Liquid Argon TPC for Dark Matter Detection

Detecting high energy photons. Interactions of photons with matter Properties of detectors (with examples)

can be read by PMTs w/o wave length shifter

DARWIN. Marc Schumann. U Freiburg LAUNCH 17 Heidelberg, September 15,

High pressure xenon gas detector with segmented electroluminescence readout for 0nbb search

Charge readout and double phase

Observing Habitable Environments Light & Radiation

Polaris 3-D CdZnTe (CZT) Gamma-Ray Imaging Spectrometers

Ricochet Proposal and Current Efforts. Alexander F. Leder

Background Neutron Studies for Coherent Elastic Neutrino-Nucleus Scattering Measurements at the SNS

Background Characterization and Rejection in the LZ Detector. David Malling Brown University IDM 2012 July 25, 2012

LARGE UNDERGROUND XENON

Classification of Solids

Rivelazione di neutrini solari - Borexino Lino Miramonti 6 Giugno 2006 Gran Sasso

Performance of the ICARUS T600 detector

Advantages / Disadvantages of semiconductor detectors

3.1 Introduction to Semiconductors. Y. Baghzouz ECE Department UNLV

Direct detection: results from liquid noble-gas experiments

The Search for Dark Matter with the XENON Experiment

Measurement of the transverse diffusion coefficient of charge in liquid xenon

X-ray ionization yields and energy spectra in liquid argon

Introduction to Electromagnetic Radiation and Radiative Transfer

Energetic particles and their detection in situ (particle detectors) Part II. George Gloeckler

DarkSide-50: performance and results from the first atmospheric argon run

Rb, which had been compressed to a density of 1013

3. Gas Detectors General introduction

Experimental Methods of Particle Physics

Development of a new MeV gamma-ray camera

Drift plane. substrate (20ÉIm polyimide) 200ÉIm. Back strip (180ÉIm width) Base (Ceramic) Anode strip (10ÉIm width) Cathode strip (100ÉIm width)

Visualization of Xe and Sn Atoms Generated from Laser-Produced Plasma for EUV Light Source

Low Energy Particles in Noble Liquids

R&D on Astroparticles Detectors. (Activity on CSN )

GEM-based gaseous Photomultipliers for UV and visible photon imaging. Dirk Mörmann Amos Breskin Rachel Chechik Marcin Balcerzyk Bhartendu Singh

DarkSide-20k and the future Liquid Argon Dark Matter program. Giuliana Fiorillo Università degli Studi di Napoli Federico II & INFN Napoli

DARWIN. Marc Schumann. U Freiburg PATRAS 2017 Thessaloniki, May 19,

PandaX detector calibration and response. 报告人 : 肖梦姣 Shanghai Jiao Tong University (On behalf of the Panda-X Collaboration)

Metal Vapour Lasers Use vapoured metal as a gain medium Developed by W. Silfvast (1966) Two types: Ionized Metal vapour (He-Cd) Neutral Metal vapour

Compton Camera. Compton Camera

CCD OPERATION. The BBD was an analog delay line, made up of capacitors such that an analog signal was moving along one step at each clock cycle.

Detection methods in particle physics

Overview about the Work with Liquid Scintillators

Radioactivity. Lecture 6 Detectors and Instrumentation

Carriers Concentration and Current in Semiconductors

Dark Matter Detection and the XENON Experiment. 1 Abstract. 2 Introduction

Near Detector Tracker. Dean Karlen / U. Victoria & TRIUMF NP04 Neutrino Session - KEK August 25, 2004

Transcription:

Electron Bubble Tracking Detector R&D Accessing the low energy solar neutrino spectrum The Electron Bubble TPC concept Recent R&D progress Next steps: towards a cubic-meter prototype Jeremy Dodd Columbia University Nevis Labs V th SNOLAB Workshop, August 2006

Solar neutrinos over full (pp) spectrum In particular, a precision, real-time measurement of the pp neutrino spectrum down to the kev range SSM uncertainty on the pp flux ~ 1% aim for 1% measurement

Detection via elastic scattering Bahcall Elastic scattering: measure energy and angle of recoil electrons to determine incident neutrino energy Most of scattered electrons are < 100 kev; flavor dependence < 50 kev A few hundred scatters per ton per year O(25) ton-year exposure needed Cross-sections for ν µ and ν τ scattering down by a factor of ~ 4 Higher energy neutrinos for free

~ O(10) tons fiducial mass Detector requirements Condensed phase target medium to give reasonable volume for this mass Excellent (sub-mm) spatial resolution for low energy tracks range, electron ID, plus pointing, at least for higher energy recoils To maintain this resolution if drifting over long distances, need very low diffusion Good energy resolution Very high purity long drifts, and low background from medium Goal of reaching kev level implies need for some gain, presumably in gas phase (Self-) shielding Excellent background rejection, in particular of γ s via Compton cluster ID Ideally, a slow drift to ease readout of large number of volumes feasible in principle in low-background environment underground

Detection medium: helium/neon In liquid phase, these low-z materials offer good compromise between volume-to-mass consideration and desire to minimize multiple scattering Very low boiling points excellent purity, since impurities freeze out In the case of thermal charge carriers, diffusion is proportional to T, so low temperature is very advantageous In liquid phase and in dense, cold gas, electrons are localized in nanoscale electron bubbles Bubble size leads to low mobilities, of order 10-3 -10-2 cm 2 sec -1 V -1, and slow drifts Electron bubbles remain thermal for E fields up to ~ 40 kv/cm, and field-ionize around 400 kv/cm In two-phase system, bubbles are trapped at the liquid-vapor interface, before tunneling out on a timescale dependent on T and E

Experimental approach: an electron bubble TPC For a homogeneous medium, one dimension must use a drift Time Projection technique Slow drift (e.g. 10 cm/sec) of electron bubbles in these fluids allows high resolution in drift direction with moderate data rate Signals stored in detector volume, and read out one plane at a time in drift direction, at a rate of 10 s-100 s Hz Zero suppression in low-rate, low-background environment gives further large reduction in data rate Depth measurement from diffusion broadening of track width Need gain if we are to access kev energies we have chosen Gas Electron Multipliers (GEMs) as the most promising avenue for our R&D program Avalanche process in the GEMs offers both charge and light as potential bases for readout schemes we are focusing on optical readout

1. Neutrino scatters on a target electron 2. Electron ionizes medium 3. Ionized electrons drift along Efield 4. Ebubbles form An Event: 5. Ebubbles drift to readout plane and photographed, ν one plane at a time ν E drift e - e -

Backgrounds No radioactive isotopes in detector medium No solubility of heavier molecules in LHe, whereas H 2 dissolves in LNe (useful!) impurities freeze out Micropore filters shown to be effective in removing dust Good energy and spatial resolution give powerful capability for recognizing Compton clusters of several scattered electrons from external γ s in the MeV range Each secondary photon from successive scatters has a lower energy, and a decreased absorption length, leading to events with a number of scattering vertices easily recognized as a Compton cluster Calculations indicate rejection factors of order 100 s 1000 s, depending on the source and the fiducial cut ongoing studies Irreducible background from MeV γ s with (improbable) single scatters in the kev range in fiducial volume Self-shielding, in LNe, effective for lower energy γ s 3D-reconstruction defines fiducial volume track width from diffusion gives reasonable depth measurement, in particular at top, where backgrounds from the readout plane can be cut

Recent results from Cryogenic Test Facility at BNL 1 < T < 300K; P up to 10 bar Field cage Windows, transmitting from IR to UV Various ionizing particle sources Operation with LHe, LNe, or other fluids of interest

Low-mobility carriers observed in liquids 200 msec Liquid neon: drift time vs E Measured drift velocities consistent with known electron bubble mobilities Long lifetimes! Excellent purity achieved easily

Surface behavior and trapping times Experimentally: Establish steady-state with ionization charges from an alpha source being drifted to the surface, and ejected into vapor phase Measured current is related to surface trapping time: Helium Neon I (na) gas 1-1 10 liquid/gas -2 10 ghe d=6.1g/l ghe d=9.5g/l LHe t=2mm LHe t=4mm 0 1000 2000 3000 4000 5000 6000 7000 8000 Vc (V) Expected monotonic increase of I with E surface trapping times ~ msec, and tunable Periodic droplet ejections from surface (visible!) trapping times sec Suitable trapping times at LHe surface, but too long for LNe at 1 Bar

Gain from GEMs in vapor Helium Neon 10 10 4 10 10 4 Gain > 10 4 maintained at ~ 30K (NIM A548 (2005) 487-498 and TNS 53 (2006)) Modest gain in He vapor; large gain (> 10 4 ) in Ne vapor with addition of fraction of H 2 operate at temperatures where finite H 2 vapor pressure With hydrogen doping, both He and Ne give gains > 10 4 in 3-GEM configuration Little true temperature effect - impurities play important role at high temperatures

GEM-optical readout concept Could use 2D array of amplifiers to detect charge, however electronics with good performance at low temp. are not readily accessible in standard silicon processes Avalanche produces light as well as charge - triplet excitation produces significant visible (plus IR?) component GEM+lenslet (back-illuminated, not avalanches!) Light confined to small region in center of GEM holes phase-space matching optical scheme to optimize light transport to readout plane (cameras) Calculations indicate transport efficiency of a few %, making use of lenslets matched to GEM holes Use commercial CCD cameras, sitting at ~ 50K

Light yield and spectrum Initially, studies with alpha tracks in neon-based mixtures at 78K: γ/e Light Gain 1.6 1.4 1.2 1 0.8 0.6 0.4 ρ Ne =0.016g/cc, 0.032g/cc Ne + 0.092% H2 Ne + 0.05% H2 Ne + 0.05% H2 (10atm) Ne + 0.1% H2 (10atm) Ne + 0.02% H2 Ne + 0.01% H2 Ne + 0.001% H2 Pure Ne II Ne+0.1% H 2 0.2 0 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 Charge Gain Charge gain (systematic errors on light yield not included) Highest charge gain achieved in Ne + 0.1% H 2 Highest (relative) light yield for Ne + 0.01% H 2 can obtain visible light yield from GEM holes of 1 photon per avalanche electron Much lower visible yield from helium-based mixtures (need to measure IR) At these concentrations, H 2 does not influence emission spectrum in Ne

First results of CCD imaging Uncollimated alpha source, ~ 10 khz rate, in Ne + 0.01% H 2 at 78K (charge gain ~ 10) Two-lens system giving ~ 1:1 magnification 60 sec exposure (~ 600k alphas!): 1 msec exposure (~ 10 alphas): 1.5 mm Non-optimal geometry, with many alphas occupying only a few GEM holes, limits available gain in this configuration

Individual tracks? Several 1 msec exposures (~ 10 alphas on average, mostly perpendicular to GEM plane): Currently optimizing setup to image individual tracks

Summary of R&D results to date Localized carriers observed in LHe, LNe long drift times (at least 200 msec) measured, confirming high purity of fluids Measurements of surface transfer show suitable trapping times for LHe, but inconveniently long times for LNe, at least at 27K higher temperatures, or single-phase medium if Ne Large, stable gains, up to 10 4, available in GEM structures, with small fraction (0.01 0.1%) of H 2 operating temperatures above ~ 10K single-phase medium if He Can achieve visible photon yields of > 1 photon per avalanche electron from GEM holes in neon-based gas mixtures Visible light yields from helium-based mixtures lower need to measure IR yield (normal helium discharge has a bright line at ~ 1 µm) Successful initial CCD imaging of alpha tracks at cryogenic temperatures individual track images very soon, followed by verification with electron tracks at T ~ 30-40K

Baseline: supercritical neon Initial ideas based on two-phase detector: Insufficient gain in vapor phase for He Trapping time at surface too long for Ne at 1 Bar Single-phase supercritical fluid: Electrons are still localized and thermal Removes difficulties of surface Ability to tune density very attractive Recombination losses lower Supercritical neon: Density ~ 0.48 g/cc (T ~ 45K, P ~ 26 bar) electron mobility ~ 6 x 10-3 cm 2 sec -1 V -1 Recoil track lengths for pp neutrinos up to ~ 2 mm Keep option to run with supercritical helium: longer/straighter tracks, pointing for lower energies, systematic checks; but smaller target mass and reduced self-shielding

Design of cubic-meter prototype One possible design J. Sondericker (BNL) Goals: Detect neutrino interactions Measure backgrounds/self-shielding performance Develop analysis techniques Explore scaling issues

Conclusion Good progress in measuring fundamental parameters for an electron bubble TPC detector Next steps: Measurements and imaging in supercritical Ne (He) Continued R&D on optical readout based on lenslets and CCD camera goal is full 3D track reconstruction with electron bubbles/slow drift Ongoing development of the cubic-meter prototype small enough to be transportable, with test phase at BNL before move to an underground site Techniques we are developing may be useful for a range of other applications requiring measurement (tracking) of very small signals in large volume detectors Columbia/Nevis: J. Dodd, R. Galea, W. Willis BNL: V. Cherniatin, R. Hackenburg, D. Lissauer, V. Radeka, M. Rehak, P. Rehak, J. Sondericker, P. Takacs, B. Yu Budker: A. Bondar, A. Buzulutskov, D. Pavlyuchenko, R. Snopkov, Y. Tikhonov SMU: R. Stroynowski

Thermal diffusion σ = 2kTd ee

Range for 250keV recoil electron

Mobility in neon