E. Grace
Royal Holloway, University of London
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by E. Grace.
Physical Review D | 2012
E. Behnke; J. Behnke; S. J. Brice; D. Broemmelsiek; J. I. Collar; A. Conner; P. S. Cooper; M. Crisler; C. E. Dahl; D. Fustin; E. Grace; J. Hall; M. Hu; I. Levine; W. H. Lippincott; T. Moan; T. Nania; E. Ramberg; A. E. Robinson; A. Sonnenschein; M. Szydagis; E. Vázquez-Jáuregui
New data are reported from the operation of a 4.0 kg CF{sub 3}I bubble chamber in the 6800 foot deep SNOLAB underground laboratory. The effectiveness of ultrasound analysis in discriminating alpha decay background events from single nuclear recoils has been confirmed, with a lower bound of >99.3% rejection of alpha decay events. Twenty single nuclear recoil event candidates and three multiple bubble events were observed during a total exposure of 553 kg-days distributed over three different bubble nucleation thresholds. The effective exposure for single bubble recoil-like events was 437.4 kg-days. A neutron background internal to the apparatus, of known origin, is estimated to account for five single nuclear recoil events and is consistent with the observed rate of multiple bubble events. This observation provides world best direct detection constraints on WIMP-proton spin-dependent scattering for WIMP masses >20 GeV/c{sup 2} and demonstrates significant sensitivity for spin-independent interactions.
Physics Letters B | 2012
S. Archambault; E. Behnke; P. Bhattacharjee; S. Bhattacharya; X. Dai; M. Das; A. Davour; F. Debris; N. Dhungana; J. Farine; S. Gagnebin; G. Giroux; E. Grace; C.M. Jackson; A. Kamaha; C. Krauss; S. Kumaratunga; M. Lafrenière; M. Laurin; I. Lawson; L. Lessard; I. Levine; C. Levy; R. MacDonald; D. Marlisov; J. P. Martin; P. Mitra; A.J. Noble; M.-C. Piro; R. Podviyanuk
Abstract Recent results from the PICASSO dark matter search experiment at SNOLAB are reported. These results were obtained using a subset of 10 detectors with a total target mass of 0.72 kg of 19F and an exposure of 114 kgd. The low backgrounds in PICASSO allow recoil energy thresholds as low as 1.7 keV to be obtained which results in an increased sensitivity to interactions from Weakly Interacting Massive Particles (WIMPs) with masses below 10 GeV/c 2 . No dark matter signal was found. Best exclusion limits in the spin dependent sector were obtained for WIMP masses of 20 GeV/c 2 with a cross section on protons of σ p S D = 0.032 pb (90% C.L.). In the spin independent sector close to the low mass region of 7 GeV/c 2 favoured by CoGeNT and DAMA/LIBRA, cross sections larger than σ p S I = 1.41 × 10 − 4 pb (90% C.L.) are excluded.
Astroparticle Physics | 2016
P.-A. Amaudruz; M. Batygov; B. Beltran; J. Bonatt; K. Boudjemline; M.G. Boulay; B. Broerman; J.F. Bueno; A. Butcher; B. Cai; T. Caldwell; M. Chen; R. Chouinard; B.T. Cleveland; D. Cranshaw; K. Dering; F. Duncan; N. Fatemighomi; R. Ford; R. Gagnon; P. Giampa; F. Giuliani; M. Gold; V.V. Golovko; P. Gorel; E. Grace; K. Graham; D. Grant; R. Hakobyan; A. L. Hallin
The DEAP-1 low-background liquid argon detector was used to measure scintillation pulse shapes of electron and nuclear recoil events and to demonstrate the feasibility of pulse-shape discrimination (PSD) down to an electron-equivalent energy of 20 keV. In the surface dataset using a triple-coincidence tag we found the fraction of beta events that are misidentified as nuclear recoils to be <1.4×10 −7 (90% C.L.) for energies between 43-86 keVee and for a nuclear recoil acceptance of at least 90%, with 4% systematic uncertainty on the absolute energy scale. The discrimination measurement on surface was limited by nuclear recoils induced by cosmic-ray generated neutrons. This was improved by moving the detector to the SNOLAB underground laboratory, where the reduced background rate allowed the same measurement with only a double-coincidence tag. The combined data set contains 1.23×10 8 events. One of those, in the underground data set, is in the nuclear-recoil region of interest. Taking into account the expected background of 0.48 events coming from random pileup, the resulting upper limit on the electronic recoil contamination is <2.7×10 −8 (90% C.L.) between 44-89 keVee and for a nuclear recoil acceptance of at least 90%, with 6% systematic uncertainty on the absolute energy scale. We developed a general mathematical framework to describe PSD parameter distributions and used it to build an analytical model of the distributions observed in DEAP-1. Using this model, we project a misidentification fraction of approx. 10 −10 for an electron-equivalent energy threshold of 15 keV for a detector with 8 PE/keVee light yield. This reduction enables a search for spin-independent scattering of WIMPs from 1000 kg of liquid argon with a WIMP-nucleon cross-section sensitivity of 10 −46 cm 2 , assuming negligible contribution from nuclear recoil backgrounds.
Astroparticle Physics | 2015
M. Akashi-Ronquest; P.-A. Amaudruz; M. Batygov; B. Beltran; M. Bodmer; M.G. Boulay; B. Broerman; B. Buck; A. Butcher; B. Cai; T. Caldwell; M. Chen; Y. Chen; B.T. Cleveland; Kevin J. Coakley; K. Dering; F. Duncan; Joseph A. Formaggio; R. Gagnon; Daniel Gastler; F. Giuliani; M. Gold; V.V. Golovko; P. Gorel; K. Graham; E. Grace; N. Guerrero; V. Guiseppe; A. L. Hallin; P.J. Harvey
Many current and future dark matter and neutrino detectors are designed to measure scintillation light with a large array of photomultiplier tubes (PMTs). The energy resolution and particle identification capabilities of these detectors depend in part on the ability to accurately identify individual photoelectrons in PMT waveforms despite large variability in pulse amplitudes and pulse pileup. We describe a Bayesian technique that can identify the times of individual photoelectrons in a sampled PMT waveform without deconvolution, even when pileup is present. To demonstrate the technique, we apply it to the general problem of particle identification in single-phase liquid argon dark matter detectors. Using the output of the Bayesian photoelectron counting algorithm described in this paper, we construct several test statistics for rejection of backgrounds for dark matter searches in argon. Compared to simpler methods based on either observed charge or peak finding, the photoelectron counting technique improves both energy resolution and particle identification of low energy events in calibration data from the DEAP-1 detector and simulation of the larger MiniCLEAN dark matter detector.
Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2017
E. Grace; A. Butcher; J. Monroe; James A. Nikkel
Physical Review D | 2014
Ed Behnke; J. Behnke; S. J. Brice; D. Broemmelsiek; J. I. Collar; A. Conner; P. S. Cooper; M. Crisler; C. E. Dahl; Drew Fustin; E. Grace; J. Hall; M. Hu; Ilan Levine; W. H. Lippincott; Timothy Moan; T. Nania; E. Ramberg; A. E. Robinson; A. Sonnenschein; M. Szydagis; E. Vázquez-Jáuregui
Physics Procedia | 2015
S. Archambault; E. Behnke; M. Besnier; P. Bhattacharjee; X. Dai; M. Das; A. Davour; F. Debris; N. Dhungana; J. Farine; M. Fines-Neuschild; S. Gagnebin; G. Giroux; E. Grace; C.M. Jackson; A. Kamaha; C. Krauss; S. Kumaratunga; M. Lafrenière; M. Laurin; I. Lawson; L. Lessard; I. Levine; C. Levy; D. Marlisov; J. P. Martin; P. Mitra; A.J. Noble; M.-C. Piro; A. Plante
Elsevier | 2015
K. Rielage; M. Akashi-Ronquest; M. Bodmer; R. Bourque; A. Butcher; T. Caldwell; Y. Chen; Kevin J. Coakley; E. Flores; Daniel Gastler; F. Giuliani; M. Gold; E. Grace; J. Griego; V. E. Guiseppe; R. Henning; A. Hime; C. Kachulis; E. Kearns; J. Klein; A. LaTorre; I.T. Lawson; S. K. Linden; F. Lopez; D. N. McKinsey; S. MacMullin; A. Mastbaum; D.-M. Mei; J. Monroe; J.A. Nikkel