A. Bolozdynya
National Research Nuclear University MEPhI
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by A. Bolozdynya.
Physical Review Letters | 2014
X. Bai; J. Balajthy; S. Bedikian; E. Bernard; A. Bernstein; A. Bolozdynya; A. Bradley; D. Byram; C. Chan; C. Chiller; K. Clark; T. Coey; A. Currie; A. Curioni; S. Dazeley; L. de Viveiros; A. Dobi; J. Dobson; E. Druszkiewicz; S. Fiorucci; C. Flores; C. Ghag; M. Hanhardt; M. Horn; M. Ihm; L. Kastens; K. Kazkaz; R. Knoche; S. Kyre; R. Lander
The Large Underground Xenon (LUX) experiment is a dual-phase xenon time-projection chamber operating at the Sanford Underground Research Facility (Lead, South Dakota). The LUX cryostat was filled for the first time in the underground laboratory in February 2013. We report results of the first WIMP search data set, taken during the period from April to August 2013, presenting the analysis of 85.3 live days of data with a fiducial volume of 118 kg. A profile-likelihood analysis technique shows our data to be consistent with the background-only hypothesis, allowing 90% confidence limits to be set on spin-independent WIMP-nucleon elastic scattering with a minimum upper limit on the cross section of 7.6 × 10(-46) cm(2) at a WIMP mass of 33 GeV/c(2). We find that the LUX data are in disagreement with low-mass WIMP signal interpretations of the results from several recent direct detection experiments.
Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2013
D. S. Akerib; X. Bai; S. Bedikian; E. Bernard; A. Bernstein; A. Bolozdynya; A. Bradley; D. Byram; S. B. Cahn; C. Camp; M.C. Carmona-Benitez; D. Carr; J.J. Chapman; A.A. Chiller; C. Chiller; K. Clark; T. Classen; T. Coffey; A. Curioni; E. Dahl; S. Dazeley; L. de Viveiros; A. Dobi; E. Dragowsky; E. Druszkiewicz; B. Edwards; C.H. Faham; S. Fiorucci; R.J. Gaitskell; K.R. Gibson
The Large Underground Xenon (LUX) collaboration has designed and constructed a dual-phase xenon detector, in order to conduct a search for Weakly Interacting Massive Particles (WIMPs), a leading dark matter candidate. The goal of the LUX detector is to clearly detect (or exclude) WIMPS with a spin independent cross-section per nucleon of 2×10-46cm2, equivalent to ∼1event/100kg/month in the inner 100-kg fiducial volume (FV) of the 370-kg detector. The overall background goals are set to have <1 background events characterized as possible WIMPs in the FV in 300 days of running. This paper describes the design and construction of the LUX detector.
Science | 2017
D. Akimov; J. B. Albert; P. An; C. Awe; P.S. Barbeau; B. Becker; V. Belov; A. Brown; A. Bolozdynya; B. Cabrera-Palmer; M. Cervantes; J. I. Collar; R. J. Cooper; R.L. Cooper; C. Cuesta; D.J. Dean; J. A. Detwiler; A. Eberhardt; Y. V. Efremenko; S. R. Elliott; E. M. Erkela; L. Fabris; M. Febbraro; N. Fields; W. Fox; Z. Fu; A. Galindo-Uribarri; M. P. Green; M. Hai; M.R. Heath
A 14.6-kilogram sodium-doped CsI scintillator is used to detect a neutrino scattering process with a 6.7σ confidence level. Nailing down an elusive process Detecting neutrinos—elementary particles that barely interact with other matter—usually requires detectors of enormous size. A particular interaction of neutrinos with atomic nuclei, called the coherent elastic neutrino-nucleus scattering (CEνNS), is predicted to occur with relatively high probability, and it could be used to drastically reduce the size of neutrino detectors. However, observing this interaction requires a source of low-energy neutrinos and detectors that contain nuclei of optimal mass. Akimov et al. observed CEνNS with a 6.7σ confidence by using a comparatively tiny, 14.6-kg sodium-doped CsI scintillator exposed to neutrinos from a spallation neutron facility (see the Perspective by Link). The discovery places tighter bounds on exotic, beyond-the-standard-model interactions involving neutrinos. Science, this issue p. 1123; see also p. 1098 The coherent elastic scattering of neutrinos off nuclei has eluded detection for four decades, even though its predicted cross section is by far the largest of all low-energy neutrino couplings. This mode of interaction offers new opportunities to study neutrino properties and leads to a miniaturization of detector size, with potential technological applications. We observed this process at a 6.7σ confidence level, using a low-background, 14.6-kilogram CsI[Na] scintillator exposed to the neutrino emissions from the Spallation Neutron Source at Oak Ridge National Laboratory. Characteristic signatures in energy and time, predicted by the standard model for this process, were observed in high signal-to-background conditions. Improved constraints on nonstandard neutrino interactions with quarks are derived from this initial data set.
arXiv: Instrumentation and Detectors | 2015
D. Akimov; A. Sosnovchev; J. I. Collar; S. Penttila; S. Suchyta; W. Lu; M. P. Green; P. An; R. Tayloe; R.T. Thornton; D. Rudik; A. Melikyan; N. Fields; L. J. Kaufman; A. Khromov; W.M. Snow; A. V. Kumpan; P. Naumov; B. Suh; A. Konovalev; K. Miller; N. Herman; A. Burenkov; B. Cabrera-Palmer; J. Newby; B. Becker; S. Hedges; A. Bolozdynya; A. Tolstukhin; K. Vetter
The COHERENT collaborations primary objective is to measure coherent elastic neutrino-nucleus scattering (CEvNS) using the unique, high-quality source of tens-of-MeV neutrinos provided by the Spallation Neutron Source (SNS) at Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL). In spite of its large cross section, the CEvNS process has never been observed, due to tiny energies of the resulting nuclear recoils which are out of reach for standard neutrino detectors. The measurement of CEvNS has now become feasible, thanks to the development of ultra-sensitive technology for rare decay and weakly-interacting massive particle (dark matter) searches. The CEvNS cross section is cleanly predicted in the standard model; hence its measurement provides a standard model test. It is relevant for supernova physics and supernova-neutrino detection, and enables validation of dark-matter detector background and detector-response models. In the long term, precision measurement of CEvNS will address questions of nuclear structure. COHERENT will deploy multiple detector technologies in a phased approach: a 14-kg CsI[Na] scintillating crystal, 15 kg of p-type point-contact germanium detectors, and 100 kg of liquid xenon in a two-phase time projection chamber. Following an extensive background measurement campaign, a location in the SNS basement has proven to be neutron-quiet and suitable for deployment of the COHERENT detector suite. The simultaneous deployment of the three COHERENT detector subsystems will test the
Instruments and Experimental Techniques | 2012
D. Yu. Akimov; I. S. Aleksandrov; V. A. Belov; A. Bolozdynya; A. Burenkov; Yu. Efremenko; M. A. Kirsanov; A. S. Kobyakin; A. G. Kovalenko; A. M. Konovalov; A. V. Kumpan; V. N. Stekhanov
N^2
Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2013
D. S. Akerib; X. Bai; S. Bedikian; A. Bernstein; A. Bolozdynya; A. Bradley; S. B. Cahn; D. Carr; J.J. Chapman; K. Clark; T. Classen; A. Curioni; C.E. Dahl; S. Dazeley; L. de Viveiros; M. R. Dragowsky; E. Druszkiewicz; S. Fiorucci; R.J. Gaitskell; C. Hall; C.H. Faham; B. Holbrook; L. Kastens; K. Kazkaz; J. Kwong; R. Lander; D.S. Leonard; D.C. Malling; R. Mannino; D. N. McKinsey
dependence of the cross section and ensure an unambiguous discovery of CEvNS. This document describes concisely the COHERENT physics motivations, sensitivity and plans for measurements at the SNS to be accomplished on a four-year timescale.
arXiv: Nuclear Experiment | 2018
D. Akimov; J. I. Collar; J. Daughhetee; R. L. Varner; A. Khromov; J. Yoo; J. Newby; A. Galindo-Uribarri; D. Reyna; M. Kaemingk; S. R. Klein; C. Cuesta; H. Ray; E.B. Iverson; M. Kremer; H. Moreno; M. Hai; P. An; John L. Orrell; M. Cervantes; C. Awe; Cory T. Overman; D.J. Salvat; W. Lu; D. Rudik; M. Febbraro; G. Sinev; B. Suh; S. Ki; G. Perumpilly
A technique for studying single-electron noise in emission detectors that are intended for detection of rare processes with small energy releases is developed. Examples of possible applications are experiments for search of dark matter in the Universe and detection of reactor antineutrinos via coherent neutrino scattering at heavy xenon nuclei. We present the first results of studying the nature of single-electron noise in a liquid-xenon emission detector and consider possible ways to suppress it.
Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2017
D. Akimov; J. B. Albert; C. Awe; P.S. Barbeau; B. Becker; V. Belov; A. Bolozdynya; A Burenkov; B. Cabrera-Palmer; M. Cervantes; J. I. Collar; R. J. Cooper; R.L. Cooper; C. Cuesta; D.J. Dean; M. del Valle Coello; J. A. Detwiler; A G Dolgolenko; M D’Onofrio; A. Eberhardt; Y. V. Efremenko; S. R. Elliott; A. Etenko; Lorenzo Fabris; N. Fields; W. Fox; A Galindo-Uribarri; M. P. Green; M.R. Heath; S. Hedges
The LUX (Large Underground Xenon) detector is a two-phase xenon Time Projection Chamber (TPC) designed to search for WIMP-nucleon dark mat
arXiv: High Energy Physics - Experiment | 2012
A. Bolozdynya; D.M. Markoff; K. Scholberg; G. B. Mills; G. T. Garvey; W. C. Louis; D. H. White; A. Hatzikoutelis; Y. V. Efremenko; V. Gudkov; F. Cavanna; S. Yen; R. Van de Water; H. Ray; W.R. Hix; Kelly M. Patton; J. Yoo; C.J. Virtue; J. M. Link
This release includes data and information necessary to perform independent analyses of the COHERENT result presented in Akimov et al., arXiv:1708.01294 [nucl-ex]. Data is shared in a binned, text-based format, including both signal and background regions, so that counts and associated uncertainties can be quantitatively calculated for the purpose of separate analyses. This document describes the included information and its format, offering some guidance on use of the data. Accompanying code examples show basic interaction with the data using Python.
arXiv: High Energy Physics - Experiment | 2013
D. Akimov; A. Bernstein; BarbeauP.; P. J. Barton; A. Bolozdynya; B. Cabrera-Palmer; F. Cavanna; V. Cianciolo; J. I. Collar; R. J. Cooper; D.J. Dean; Yuri Efremenko; A. Etenko; N. Fields; M. Foxe; Enectali Figueroa-Feliciano; N. Fomin; F. Gallmeier; I. Garishvili; M. Gerling; M. P. Green; G. Greene; A. Hatzikoutelis; R. Henning; R. Hix; D. Hogan; D. Hornback; I. Jovanovic; T.W. Hossbach; Erik B Iverson
The COHERENT Collaboration is realizing a long term neutrino physics research program. The main goals of the program are to detect and study elastic neutrino-nucleus scattering (CEνNS). This process is predicted by Standard Model but it has never been observed experimentally because of the very low energy of the recoil nucleus. COHERENT is using different detector technologies: CsI[Na] and NaI scintillator crystals, a single-phase liquid Ar and a Ge detectors. The placement of all the detector setups is in the basement of the Spallation Neutron Source (SNS) at Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL). The current status of the COHERENT experimental program is presented.