L. Reichhart
University of Edinburgh
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Featured researches published by L. Reichhart.
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.
Physics Letters B | 2012
D. Yu. Akimov; H.M. Araújo; E. J. Barnes; V. A. Belov; A. Bewick; A. Burenkov; V. Chepel; A. Currie; L. DeViveiros; B. Edwards; C. Ghag; A. Hollingsworth; M. Horn; W.G. Jones; G. Kalmus; A. S. Kobyakin; A. G. Kovalenko; V. N. Lebedenko; A. Lindote; M.I. Lopes; R. Lüscher; P. Majewski; A. St. J. Murphy; F. Neves; S. M. Paling; J. Pinto da Cunha; R. Preece; J. J. Quenby; L. Reichhart; P.R. Scovell
Abstract We report experimental upper limits on WIMP-nucleon elastic scattering cross sections from the second science run of ZEPLIN-III at the Boulby Underground Laboratory. A raw fiducial exposure of 1344 kg⋅days was accrued over 319 days of continuous operation between June 2010 and May 2011. A total of eight events was observed in the signal acceptance region in the nuclear recoil energy range 7–29 keV, which is compatible with background expectations. This allows the exclusion of the scalar cross-section above 4.8 × 10 − 8 pb near 50 GeV / c 2 WIMP mass with 90% confidence. Combined with data from the first run, this result improves to 3.9 × 10 − 8 pb . The corresponding WIMP-neutron spin-dependent cross-section limit is 8.0 × 10 − 3 pb . The ZEPLIN programme reaches thus its conclusion at Boulby, having deployed and exploited successfully three liquid xenon experiments of increasing reach.
Physics Letters B | 2011
M. Horn; V. A. Belov; D. Yu. Akimov; H.M. Araújo; E. J. Barnes; A. Burenkov; V. Chepel; A. Currie; B. Edwards; C. Ghag; A. Hollingsworth; G. Kalmus; A. S. Kobyakin; A. G. Kovalenko; V. N. Lebedenko; A. Lindote; M.I. Lopes; R. Lüscher; P. Majewski; A. St. J. Murphy; F. Neves; S. M. Paling; J. Pinto da Cunha; R. Preece; J. J. Quenby; L. Reichhart; P.R. Scovell; Catarina Silva; V. Solovov; N.J.T. Smith
Scintillation and ionisation yields for nuclear recoils in liquid xenon above 10 keVnr (nuclear recoil energy) are deduced from data acquired using broadband Am–Be neutron sources. The nuclear recoil data from several exposures to two sources were compared to detailed simulations. Energy-dependent scintillation and ionisation yields giving acceptable fits to the data were derived. Efficiency and resolution effects are treated using a light collection Monte Carlo, measured photomultiplier response profiles and hardware trigger studies. A gradual fall in scintillation yield below ∼40 keVnr is found, together with a rising ionisation yield; both are in agreement with the latest independent measurements. The analysis method is applied to the most recent ZEPLIN-III data, acquired with a significantly upgraded detector and a precision-calibrated Am–Be source, as well as to the earlier data from the first run in 2008. A new method for deriving the recoil scintillation yield, which includes sub-threshold S1 events, is also presented which confirms the main analysis.
ieee nuclear science symposium | 2011
V. Solovov; V. A. Belov; D. Y. Akimov; H.M. Araújo; E. J. Barnes; A. Burenkov; V. Chepel; A. Currie; L. DeViveiros; Blair Edwards; C. Ghag; A. Hollingsworth; M. Horn; G. Kalmus; A. S. Kobyakin; A. G. Kovalenko; V. N. Lebedenko; A. Lindote; M.I. Lopes; R. Lüscher; P. Majewski; Asj Murphy; F. Neves; S. M. Paling; J. Pinto da Cunha; R. Preece; J. J. Quenby; L. Reichhart; P.R. Scovell; Catarina Silva
We studied the application of statistical reconstruction algorithms, namely maximum likelihood and least squares methods, to the problem of event reconstruction in a dual phase liquid xenon detector. An iterative method was developed for in-situ reconstruction of the PMT light response functions from calibration data taken with an uncollimated γ -ray source. Using the techniques described, the performance of the ZEPLIN-III dark matter detector was studied for 122 keV γ-rays. For the inner part of the detector (R <; 100 mm) , spatial resolutions of 13 mm and 1.6 mm FWHM were measured in the horizontal plane for primary and secondary scintillation, respectively. An energy resolution of 8.1% FWHM was achieved at that energy. The possibility of using this technique for improving performance and reducing cost of scintillation cameras for medical applications is currently under study.
Journal of High Energy Physics | 2011
E. Santos; B. Edwards; V. Chepel; H.M. Araújo; D. Y. Akimov; E. J. Barnes; V. A. Belov; A. Burenkov; A. Currie; L. DeViveiros; C. Ghag; A. Hollingsworth; M. Horn; G. Kalmus; A. S. Kobyakin; A. G. Kovalenko; V. N. Lebedenko; A. Lindote; M.I. Lopes; R. Lüscher; P. Majewski; A. St. J. Murphy; F. Neves; S. M. Paling; J. Pinto da Cunha; R. Preece; J. J. Quenby; L. Reichhart; P.R. Scovell; Catarina Silva
A bstractWe present an experimental study of single electron emission in ZEPLIN-III, a two-phase xenon experiment built to search for dark matter WIMPs, and discuss appli-cations enabled by the excellent signal-to-noise ratio achieved in detecting this signature. Firstly, we demonstrate a practical method for precise measurement of the free electron lifetime in liquid xenon during normal operation of these detectors. Then, using a realistic detector response model and backgrounds, we assess the feasibility of deploying such an instrument for measuring coherent neutrino-nucleus elastic scattering using the ionisation channel in the few-electron regime. We conclude that it should be possible to measure this elusive neutrino signature above an ionisation threshold of ~3 electrons both at a stopped pion source and at a nuclear reactor. Detectable signal rates are larger in the reactor case, but the triggered measurement and harder recoil energy spectrum afforded by the accelerator source enable lower overall background and fiducialisation of the active volume.
Physical Review D | 2016
D. S. Akerib; H.M. Araújo; X. Bai; A.J. Bailey; J. Balajthy; P. Beltrame; E. Bernard; A. Bernstein; T. P. Biesiadzinski; E. M. Boulton; A. Bradley; R. Bramante; S. B. Cahn; M.C. Carmona-Benitez; C. Chan; J.J. Chapman; A.A. Chiller; C. Chiller; A. Currie; J. E. Cutter; T. J. R. Davison; L. de Viveiros; A. Dobi; J. Dobson; E. Druszkiewicz; Blair Edwards; C.H. Faham; S. Fiorucci; R.J. Gaitskell; V. M. Gehman
We present measurements of the electron-recoil (ER) response of the LUX dark matter detector based upon 170 000 highly pure and spatially uniform tritium decays. We reconstruct the tritium energy spectrum using the combined energy model and find good agreement with expectations. We report the average charge and light yields of ER events in liquid xenon at 180 and 105 V/cm and compare the results to the NEST model. We also measure the mean charge recombination fraction and its fluctuations, and we investigate the location and width of the LUX ER band. These results provide input to a reanalysis of the LUX run 3 weakly interacting massive particle search.
Physics Letters B | 2010
D. Yu. Akimov; H.M. Araújo; E. J. Barnes; V. A. Belov; A. Bewick; A. Burenkov; R. Cashmore; V. Chepel; A. Currie; D. Davidge; J. Dawson; T. Durkin; B. Edwards; C. Ghag; A. Hollingsworth; M. Horn; A.S. Howard; A.J. Hughes; W.G. Jones; G. Kalmus; A. S. Kobyakin; A.G. Kovalenko; V. N. Lebedenko; A. Lindote; I. Liubarsky; M.I. Lopes; R. Lüscher; K. Lyons; P. Majewski; A. St. J. Murphy
Abstract We present limits on the WIMP–nucleon cross section for inelastic dark matter from a reanalysis of the 2008 run of ZEPLIN-III. Cuts, notably on scintillation pulse shape and scintillation-to-ionisation ratio, give a net exposure of 63 kg day in the range 20– 80 keV nuclear recoil energy, in which 6 events are observed. Upper limits on signal rate are derived from the maximum empty patch in the data. Under standard halo assumptions a small region of parameter space consistent, at 99% CL, with causing the 1.17 ton yr DAMA modulation signal is allowed at 90% CL: it is in the mass range 45– 60 GeV c − 2 with a minimum CL of 87%, again derived from the maximum patch. This is the tightest constraint yet presented using xenon, a target nucleus whose similarity to iodine mitigiates systematic error from the assumed halo.
Astroparticle Physics | 2012
H.M. Araújo; D. Yu. Akimov; E. J. Barnes; V. A. Belov; A. Bewick; A. Burenkov; V. Chepel; A. Currie; L. DeViveiros; B. Edwards; C. Ghag; A. Hollingsworth; M. Horn; G. Kalmus; A. S. Kobyakin; A. G. Kovalenko; V. N. Lebedenko; A. Lindote; M.I. Lopes; R. Lüscher; P. Majewski; A. St. J. Murphy; F. Neves; S. M. Paling; J. Pinto da Cunha; R. Preece; J. J. Quenby; L. Reichhart; P.R. Scovell; Catarina Silva
We examine electron and nuclear recoil backgrounds from radioactivity in the ZEPLIN-III dark matter experiment at Boulby. The rate of low-energy electron recoils in the liquid xenon WIMP target is 0.75±0.05 events/kg/day/keV, which represents a 20-fold improvement over the rate observed during the first science run. Energy and spatial distributions agree with those predicted by component-level Monte Carlo simulations propagating the effects of the radiological contamination measured for materials employed in the experiment. Neutron elastic scattering is predicted to yield 3.05±0.5 nuclear recoils with energy 5–50 keV per year, which translates to an expectation of 0.4 events in a 1-year dataset in anti-coincidence with the veto detector for realistic signal acceptance. Less obvious background sources are discussed, especially in the context of future experiments. These include contamination of scintillation pulses with Cherenkov light
Astroparticle Physics | 2011
C. Ghag; D. Yu. Akimov; H.M. Araújo; E. J. Barnes; V. A. Belov; A. Burenkov; V. Chepel; A. Currie; L. DeViveiros; B. Edwards; V. Francis; A. Hollingsworth; M. Horn; G. Kalmus; A. S. Kobyakin; A. G. Kovalenko; V. N. Lebedenko; A. Lindote; M.I. Lopes; R. Lüscher; K. Lyons; P. Majewski; A. St. J. Murphy; F. Neves; S. M. Paling; J. Pinto da Cunha; R. Preece; J. J. Quenby; L. Reichhart; P.R. Scovell
The ZEPLIN-III experiment is operating in its second phase at the Boulby Underground Laboratory in search of dark matter WIMPs. The major upgrades to the instrument over its first science run include lower background photomultiplier tubes and installation of a plastic scintillator veto system. Performance results from the veto detector using calibration and science data in its first six months of operation in coincidence with ZEPLIN-III are presented. With fully automated operation and calibration, the veto system has maintained high stability and achieves near unity live time relative to ZEPLIN-III. Calibrations with a neutron source demonstrate a rejection of 60% of neutron-induced nuclear recoils in ZEPLIN-III that might otherwise be misidentified as WIMPs. This tagging efficiency reduces the expected untagged nuclear recoil background from neutrons during science data taking to a very low rate of ≃0.2 events per year in the WIMP acceptance region. Additionally, the veto detector provides rejection of 28% of γ-ray induced background events, allowing the sampling of the dominant source of background in ZEPLIN-III – multiple scatter γ-rays with rare topologies. Since WIMPs will not be tagged by the veto detector, and tags due to γ-rays and neutrons are separable, this population of multiple scatter events may be characterised without biasing the analysis of candidate WIMP signals in the data.
Astroparticle Physics | 2013
L. Reichhart; A. Lindote; D. Yu. Akimov; H.M. Araújo; E. J. Barnes; V. A. Belov; A. Bewick; A. Burenkov; V. Chepel; A. Currie; L. DeViveiros; B. Edwards; V. Francis; C. Ghag; A. Hollingsworth; M. Horn; G. Kalmus; A. S. Kobyakin; A. G. Kovalenko; V.A. Kudryavtsev; V. N. Lebedenko; M.I. Lopes; R. Lüscher; P. Majewski; A. St. J. Murphy; F. Neves; S. M. Paling; J. Pinto da Cunha; R. Preece; J. J. Quenby
A measurement is presented of the neutron production rate in lead by high energy cosmic-ray muons at a depth of 2850 m water equivalent (w.e.) and a mean muon energy of 260 GeV. The measurement exploits the delayed coincidences between muons and the radiative capture of induced neutrons in a highly segmented tonne scale plastic scintillator detector. Detailed Mo nte Carlo simulations reproduce well the measured capture times and multiplicities and, within the dynamic range of the instrume ntation, the spectrum of energy deposits. By comparing measurements with simulations of neutron capture rates a neutron yield in lead of (5.78 +0.21 −0.28 )× 10 −3 neutrons/muon/(g/cm 2 ) has been obtained. Absolute agreement between simulation and data is of order 25%.