Sep 8 – 14, 2019
Toyama International Conference Center
Japan timezone

Measuring cosmogenic activation rates in active detector material

Sep 9, 2019, 5:10 PM
20m
202 (Toyama International Conference Center)

202

Toyama International Conference Center

taup2019-sec@km.icrr.u-tokyo.ac.jp
Oral presentation in parallel session Dark matter DM4: Backgrounds in Dark Matter Experiments I

Speaker

Dr Richard Saldanha (Pacific Northwest National Laboratory)

Description

Long-lived radioactive isotopes produced by cosmogenic activation are a major source of background for rare event searches such as dark matter and neutrinoless double beta decay. Understanding the production rates of these cosmogenic isotopes is extremely important for determining the total allowable surface residence time of detector materials during fabrication, storage, and transportation. However, experimentally measuring the production rate is difficult due to low specific activities and because several of the decays of interest produce low energy electrons and x-rays that are not easily detectable. I will discuss a measurement technique that uses a high intensity neutron beam (with a spectrum similar to cosmic ray neutrons) in conjunction with low-background self-counting methods to determine production rates in active detector materials. Based on this technique I will present results from the first experimental measurement of 39Ar and 37Ar cosmogenic production rates in argon, ongoing work on the first measurement of cosmogenic tritium production in silicon, and possible applications to other detector materials.

Primary author

Dr Richard Saldanha (Pacific Northwest National Laboratory)

Presentation materials