D. Barker
University of Minnesota
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Featured researches published by D. Barker.
Physical Review Letters | 2016
R. Agnese; A. J. Anderson; T. Aramaki; M. Asai; W. Baker; D. Balakishiyeva; D. Barker; R. Basu Thakur; D. A. Bauer; J. Billard; A. Borgland; M. A. Bowles; P. L. Brink; R. Bunker; B. Cabrera; David O. Caldwell; R. Calkins; D. G. Cerdeno; H. Chagani; Yan Chen; J. Cooley; B. Cornell; P. Cushman; M. Daal; P. Di Stefano; T. Doughty; L. Esteban; S. Fallows; E. Figueroa-Feliciano; M. Ghaith
The CDMS low ionization threshold experiment (CDMSlite) uses cryogenic germanium detectors operated at a relatively high bias voltage to amplify the phonon signal in the search for weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPs). Results are presented from the second CDMSlite run with an exposure of 70xa0kg day, which reached an energy threshold for electron recoils as low as 56xa0eV. A fiducialization cut reduces backgrounds below those previously reported by CDMSlite. New parameter space for the WIMP-nucleon spin-independent cross section is excluded for WIMP masses between 1.6 and 5.5u2009u2009GeV/c^{2}.R. Agnese, A.J. Anderson, T. Aramaki, M. Asai, W. Baker, D. Balakishiyeva, D. Barker, R. Basu Thakur, 23 D.A. Bauer, J. Billard, A. Borgland, M.A. Bowles, P.L. Brink, R. Bunker, B. Cabrera, D.O. Caldwell, R. Calkins, D.G. Cerdeno, H. Chagani, Y. Chen, J. Cooley, B. Cornell, P. Cushman, M. Daal, P.C.F. Di Stefano, T. Doughty, L. Esteban, S. Fallows, E. Figueroa-Feliciano, M. Ghaith, G.L. Godfrey, S.R. Golwala, J. Hall, H.R. Harris, T. Hofer, D. Holmgren, L. Hsu, M.E. Huber, D. Jardin, A. Jastram, O. Kamaev, B. Kara, M.H. Kelsey, A. Kennedy, A. Leder, B. Loer, E. Lopez Asamar, P. Lukens, R. Mahapatra, V. Mandic, N. Mast, N. Mirabolfathi, R.A. Moffatt, J.D. Morales Mendoza, S.M. Oser, K. Page, W.A. Page, R. Partridge, M. Pepin, ∗ A. Phipps, K. Prasad, M. Pyle, H. Qiu, W. Rau, P. Redl, A. Reisetter, Y. Ricci, A. Roberts, H.E. Rogers, T. Saab, B. Sadoulet, 4 J. Sander, K. Schneck, R.W. Schnee, S. Scorza, B. Serfass, B. Shank, D. Speller, D. Toback, R. Underwood, S. Upadhyayula, A.N. Villano, B. Welliver, J.S. Wilson, D.H. Wright, S. Yellin, J.J. Yen, B.A. Young, and J. Zhang
Physical Review D | 2017
R. Agnese; A. J. Anderson; T. Aramaki; I. J. Arnquist; W. Baker; D. Barker; R. Basu Thakur; D. A. Bauer; A. W. Borgland; M.A. Bowles; P. L. Brink; R. Bunker; B. Cabrera; David O. Caldwell; R. Calkins; C. Cartaro; D. G. Cerdeno; H. Chagani; Yan Chen; J. Cooley; B. Cornell; P. Cushman; M. Daal; P. Di Stefano; T. Doughty; L. Esteban; S. Fallows; E. Figueroa-Feliciano; M. Fritts; G. Gerbier
SuperCDMS SNOLAB will be a next-generation experiment aimed at directly detecting low-mass particles (with masses ≤ 10 GeV/c^2) that may constitute dark matter by using cryogenic detectors of two types (HV and iZIP) and two target materials (germanium and silicon). The experiment is being designed with an initial sensitivity to nuclear recoil cross sections ∼ 1×10^(−43) cm^2 for a dark matter particle mass of 1 GeV/c^2, and with capacity to continue exploration to both smaller masses and better sensitivities. The phonon sensitivity of the HV detectors will be sufficient to detect nuclear recoils from sub-GeV dark matter. A detailed calibration of the detector response to low-energy recoils will be needed to optimize running conditions of the HV detectors and to interpret their data for dark matter searches. Low-activity shielding, and the depth of SNOLAB, will reduce most backgrounds, but cosmogenically produced ^3H and naturally occurring ^(32)Si will be present in the detectors at some level. Even if these backgrounds are 10 times higher than expected, the science reach of the HV detectors would be over 3 orders of magnitude beyond current results for a dark matter mass of 1 GeV/c^2. The iZIP detectors are relatively insensitive to variations in detector response and backgrounds, and will provide better sensitivity for dark matter particles with masses ≳ 5 GeV/c^2. The mix of detector types (HV and iZIP), and targets (germanium and silicon), planned for the experiment, as well as flexibility in how the detectors are operated, will allow us to maximize the low-mass reach, and understand the backgrounds that the experiment will encounter. Upgrades to the experiment, perhaps with a variety of ultra-low-background cryogenic detectors, will extend dark matter sensitivity down to the “neutrino floor,” where coherent scatters of solar neutrinos become a limiting background.
Physical Review D | 2015
R. Agnese; A. J. Anderson; M. Asai; D. Balakishiyeva; D. Barker; R. Basu Thakur; D. A. Bauer; J. Billard; A. W. Borgland; M. A. Bowles; D. Brandt; P. L. Brink; R. Bunker; B. Cabrera; David O. Caldwell; R. Calkins; D. G. Cerdeno; H. Chagani; Yan Chen; J. Cooley; B. Cornell; C. H. Crewdson; P. Cushman; M. Daal; P. Di Stefano; T. Doughty; L. Esteban; S. Fallows; E. Figueroa-Feliciano; G. Godfrey
CDMS II data from the five-tower runs at the Soudan Underground Laboratory were reprocessed with an improved charge-pulse fitting algorithm. Two new analysis techniques to reject surface-event backgrounds were applied to the 612 kg days germanium-detector weakly interacting massive particle (WIMP)-search exposure. An extended analysis was also completed by decreasing the 10 keV analysis threshold to ∼5u2009u2009keV, to increase sensitivity near a WIMP mass of 8u2009u2009GeV/c^2. After unblinding, there were zero candidate events above a deposited energy of 10 keV and six events in the lower-threshold analysis. This yielded minimum WIMP-nucleon spin-independent scattering cross-section limits of 1.8×10^(−44) and 1.18×10^(−41) at 90% confidence for 60 and 8.6u2009u2009GeV/c^2 WIMPs, respectively. This improves the previous CDMS II result by a factor of 2.4 (2.7) for 60 (8.6)u2009u2009GeV/c^2 WIMPs.
Physical Review D | 2015
K. Schneck; B. Cabrera; D. G. Cerdeno; V. Mandic; H. E. Rogers; R. Agnese; A. J. Anderson; M. Asai; D. Balakishiyeva; D. Barker; R. Basu Thakur; D. A. Bauer; J. Billard; A. Borgland; D. Brandt; P. L. Brink; R. Bunker; David O. Caldwell; R. Calkins; H. Chagani; Yan Chen; J. Cooley; B. Cornell; C. H. Crewdson; P. Cushman; M. Daal; P. Di Stefano; T. Doughty; L. Esteban; S. Fallows
We examine the consequences of the effective field theory (EFT) of dark matter–nucleon scattering for current and proposed direct detection experiments. Exclusion limits on EFT coupling constants computed using the optimum interval method are presented for SuperCDMS Soudan, CDMS II, and LUX, and the necessity of combining results from multiple experiments in order to determine dark matter parameters is discussed. We demonstrate that spectral differences between the standard dark matter model and a general EFT interaction can produce a bias when calculating exclusion limits and when developing signal models for likelihood and machine learning techniques. We also discuss the implications of the EFT for the next-generation (G2) direct detection experiments and point out regions of complementarity in the EFT parameter space.
Astroparticle Physics | 2019
R. Agnese; T. Aralis; T. Aramaki; I. J. Arnquist; E. Azadbakht; W. Baker; S. Banik; D. Barker; D. A. Bauer; T. Binder; M.A. Bowles; P. L. Brink; R. Bunker; B. Cabrera; R. Calkins; C. Cartaro; D. G. Cerdeno; Y.-Y. Chang; J. Cooley; B. Cornell; P. Cushman; T. Doughty; E. Fascione; E. Figueroa-Feliciano; C.W. Fink; M. Fritts; G. Gerbier; R. Germond; M. Ghaith; S. R. Golwala
Future direct searches for low-mass dark matter particles with germanium detectors, such as SuperCDMS SNOLAB, are expected to be limited by backgrounds from radioactive isotopes activated by cosmogenic radiation inside the germanium. There are limited experimental data available to constrain production rates and a large spread of theoretical predictions. We examine the calculation of expected production rates, and analyze data from the second run of the CDMS low ionization threshold experiment (CDMSlite) to estimate the rates for several isotopes. We model the measured CDMSlite spectrum and fit for contributions from tritium and other isotopes. Using the knowledge of the detector history, these results are converted to cosmogenic production rates at sea level. The production rates in atoms/(kgu202f·u202fday) are 74 u202f±u202f 9 for ^3H, 1.5 u202f±u202f 0.7 for ^(55)Fe, 17 u202f±u202f 5 for ^(65)Zn, and 30 u202f±u202f 18 for ^(68)Ge.
Applied Physics Letters | 2018
R. Agnese; T. Aralis; T. Aramaki; I. J. Arnquist; E. Azadbakht; W. Baker; S. Banik; D. Barker; D. A. Bauer; T. Binder; M.A. Bowles; P. L. Brink; R. Bunker; B. Cabrera; R. Calkins; C. Cartaro; D. G. Cerdeno; Y.-Y. Chang; J. Cooley; B. Cornell; P. Cushman; P. Di Stefano; T. Doughty; E. Fascione; E. Figueroa-Feliciano; C.W. Fink; M. Fritts; G. Gerbier; R. Germond; M. Ghaith
The Super Cryogenic Dark Matter Search experiment at the Soudan Underground Laboratory studied energy loss associated with defect formation in germanium crystals at mK temperatures using in situ 210Pb sources. We examine the spectrum of 206Pb nuclear recoils near its expected 103u2009keV endpoint energy and determine an energy loss of (6:08u2009±u20090:18)%, which we attribute to defect formation. From this result and using TRIM simulations, we extract the first experimentally determined average displacement threshold energy of 19.7−0.5+0.6 eV for germanium. This has implications for the analysis thresholds of future germanium-based dark matter searches.The Super Cryogenic Dark Matter Search experiment at the Soudan Underground Laboratory studied energy loss associated with defect formation in germanium crystals at mK temperatures using in situ 210Pb sources. We examine the spectrum of 206Pb nuclear recoils near its expected 103u2009keV endpoint energy and determine an energy loss of (6:08u2009±u20090:18)%, which we attribute to defect formation. From this result and using TRIM simulations, we extract the first experimentally determined average displacement threshold energy of 19.7−0.5+0.6 eV for germanium. This has implications for the analysis thresholds of future germanium-based dark matter searches.
Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2017
G. Agnolet; W. Baker; D. Barker; R. Beck; T. J. Carroll; J. Cesar; P. Cushman; James B. Dent; S. De Rijck; Bhaskar Dutta; Will Flanagan; M. Fritts; Yu Gao; H.R. Harris; C.C. Hays; V. Iyer; A. Jastram; F. Kadribasic; A. Kennedy; A. Kubik; K. Lang; R. Mahapatra; V. Mandic; C. Marianno; R. Martin; N. Mast; S. McDeavitt; N. Mirabolfathi; B. Mohanty; K. Nakajima
arXiv: High Energy Physics - Experiment | 2017
R. Agnese; T. Aramaki; I. J. Arnquist; W. Baker; D. Balakishiyeva; S. Banik; D. Barker; R. Basu Thakur; D. A. Bauer; T. Binder; M. A. Bowles; P. L. Brink; R. Bunker; B. Cabrera; David O. Caldwell; R. Calkins; C. Cartaro; D. G. Cerdeno; Y.-Y. Chang; Yan Chen; J. Cooley; B. Cornell; P. Cushman; M. Daal; P. Di Stefano; T. Doughty; E. Fascione; E. Figueroa-Feliciano; M. Fritts; G. Gerbier