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Dive into the research topics where M. Auger is active.

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Featured researches published by M. Auger.


Physical Review Letters | 2012

Search for Neutrinoless Double-Beta Decay in 136 Xe with EXO-200

M. Auger; A. P. Waite; W. Feldmeier; T. N. Johnson; M. Hughes; P. C. Rowson; A. Kuchenkov; J. D. Wright; J.-L. Vuilleumier; T. Walton; K. Graham; C. G. Davis; A. Pocar; David A. Sinclair; K. Hall; A. Odian; S. Delaquis; K.S. Kumar; L. J. Kaufman; R. MacLellan; K. Twelker; M. Breidenbach; R. DeVoe; A. Burenkov; G. Giroux; S. Herrin; A. Sabourov; T. Brunner; P. Vogel; L. Yang

We report on a search for neutrinoless double-beta decay of 136Xe with EXO-200. No signal is observed for an exposure of 32.5 kg yr, with a background of ∼1.5×10(-3)  kg(-1) yr(-1)  keV(-1) in the ±1σ region of interest. This sets a lower limit on the half-life of the neutrinoless double-beta decay T(1/2)(0νββ)(136Xe)>1.6×10(25)  yr (90% C.L.), corresponding to effective Majorana masses of less than 140-380 meV, depending on the matrix element calculation.


Physical Review Letters | 2012

Search for Neutrinoless Double-Beta Decay in 136Xe with EXO-200

M. Auger; D. J. Auty; P. S. Barbeau; E. Beauchamp; V. Belov; C. Benitez-Medina; M. Breidenbach; T. Brunner; A. Burenkov; B. Cleveland; S. Cook; T. Daniels; M. Danilov; C. G. Davis; S. Delaquis; R. DeVoe; A. Dobi; M. J. Dolinski; A. Dolgolenko; M. Dunford; W. Fairbank; J. Farine; W. Feldmeier; P. Fierlinger; D. Franco; G. Giroux; R. Gornea; K. Graham; G. Gratta; C. Hall

We report on a search for neutrinoless double-beta decay of 136Xe with EXO-200. No signal is observed for an exposure of 32.5 kg yr, with a background of ∼1.5×10(-3)  kg(-1) yr(-1)  keV(-1) in the ±1σ region of interest. This sets a lower limit on the half-life of the neutrinoless double-beta decay T(1/2)(0νββ)(136Xe)>1.6×10(25)  yr (90% C.L.), corresponding to effective Majorana masses of less than 140-380 meV, depending on the matrix element calculation.


Journal of Instrumentation | 2012

The EXO-200 detector, part I: detector design and construction

M. Auger; D. J. Auty; P.S. Barbeau; L. Bartoszek; E. Baussan; E. Beauchamp; C. Benitez-Medina; M. Breidenbach; D. Chauhan; B. Cleveland; R. Conley; J. Cook; S. Cook; A. Coppens; W.W. Craddock; T. Daniels; C. G. Davis; J. Davis; R. DeVoe; A. Dobi; M. J. Dolinski; M. Dunford; W. Fairbank; J. Farine; P. Fierlinger; D. Franco; G. Giroux; R. Gornea; K. Graham; G. Gratta

EXO-200 is an experiment designed to search for double beta decay of 136Xe with a single-phase, liquid xenon detector. It uses an active mass of 110 kg of xenon enriched to 80.6% in the isotope 136 in an ultra-low background time projection chamber capable of simultaneous detection of ionization and scintillation. This paper describes the EXO-200 detector with particular attention to the most innovative aspects of the design that revolve around the reduction of backgrounds, the efficient use of the expensive isotopically enriched xenon, and the optimization of the energy resolution in a relatively large volume.


Physical Review C | 2013

An improved measurement of the 2\nu \beta \beta\ half-life of Xe-136 with EXO-200

J. B. Albert; M. Auger; D. J. Auty; P. S. Barbeau; E. Beauchamp; D. Beck; V. Belov; C. Benitez-Medina; J. Bonatt; M. Breidenbach; T. Brunner; A. Burenkov; G. F. Cao; C. Chambers; J. Chaves; B. T. Cleveland; S. Cook; T. Daniels; M. Danilov; S. J. Daugherty; C. G. Davis; James G. Davis; S. Delaquis; R. DeVoe; A. Dobi; M. J. Dolinski; A. Dolgolenko; M. Dunford; W. Fairbank; J. Farine

We report on an improved measurement of the 2\nu \beta \beta\ half-life of Xe-136 performed by EXO-200. The use of a large and homogeneous time projection chamber allows for the precise estimate of the fiducial mass used for the measurement, resulting in a small systematic uncertainty. We also discuss in detail the data analysis methods used for double-beta decay searches with EXO-200, while emphasizing those directly related to the present measurement. The Xe-136 2\nu \beta \beta\ half-life is found to be 2.165 +- 0.016 (stat) +- 0.059 (sys) x 10^21 years. This is the most precisely measured half-life of any 2\nu \beta \beta\ decay to date.


Measurement Science and Technology | 2015

Low current performance of the Bern medical cyclotron down to the pA range

M. Auger; Saverio Braccini; A. Ereditato; Konrad Pawel Nesteruk; P. Scampoli

A medical cyclotron accelerating H− ions to 18 MeV is in operation at the Bern University Hospital (Inselspital). It is the commercial IBA 18/18 cyclotron equipped with a specifically conceived 6 m long external beam line ending in a separate bunker. This feature is unique for a hospital-based facility and makes it possible to conduct routine radioisotope production for PET diagnostics in parallel with multidisciplinary research activities, among which are novel particle detectors, radiation biophysics, radioprotection, radiochemistry and radiopharmacy developments. Several of these activities, such as radiobiology experiments for example, require low current beams down to the pA range, while medical cyclotrons are designed for high current operation above 10 μA. In this paper, we present the first results on the low current performance of a PET medical cyclotron obtained by ion source, radio-frequency and main coil tuning. With this method, stable beam currents down to () pA were obtained and measured with a high-sensitivity Faraday cup located at the end of the beam transport line.


5th Symposium on Large TPCs for Low Energy Rare Event Detection and Workshop on Neutrinos from Supernovae | 2011

Prospects for Barium Tagging in Gaseous Xenon

David A. Sinclair; E. Rollin; Jeffrey C. Smith; A Mommers; N Ackeran; B. Aharmin; M. Auger; P.S. Barbeau; C. Benitez-Medina; M. Breidenbach; A. Burenkov; S Cook; A. Coppens; T. Daniels; R. DeVoe; A. Dobi; M. J. Dolinski; K Donato; W. Fairbank; J. Farine; G. Giroux; G Gornea; K. Graham; G. Gratta; M. P. Green; C. Hagemann; C. Hall; K. Hall; D. Hallman; C. Hargrove

Tagging events with the coincident detection of a barium ion would greatly reduce the background for a neutrino-less double beta decay search in xenon. This paper describes progress towards realizing this goal. It outlines a source that can produce large quantities of Ba++ in gas, shows that this can be extracted to vacuum, and demonstrates a mechanism by which the Ba++ can be efficiently converted to Ba+ as required for laser identification.


Journal of Instrumentation | 2014

A method to suppress dielectric breakdowns in liquid argon ionization detectors for cathode to ground distances of several millimeters

M. Auger; A. Ereditato; D. Goeldi; S. Janos; I. Kreslo; M. Luethi; C. Rudolf von Rohr; T. Strauss; T. Tolba; M. Weber

We present a method to reach electric field intensity as high as 400 kV/cm in liquid argon for cathode-ground distances of several millimeters. This can be achieved by suppressing field emission from the cathode, overcoming limitations that we reported earlier.


Journal of Instrumentation | 2016

A detector based on silica fibers for ion beam monitoring in a wide current range

M. Auger; Saverio Braccini; Tommaso Stefano Carzaniga; A. Ereditato; Konrad Pawel Nesteruk; P. Scampoli

A detector based on doped silica and optical fibers was developed to monitor the profile of particle accelerator beams of intensity ranging from 1 pA to tens of μA. Scintillation light produced in a fiber moving across the beam is measured, giving information on its position, shape and intensity. The detector was tested with a continuous proton beam at the 18 MeV Bern medical cyclotron used for radioisotope production and multi-disciplinary research. For currents from 1 pA to 20 μA, Ce3+ and Sb3+ doped silica fibers were used as sensors. Read-out systems based on photodiodes, photomultipliers and solid state photomultipliers were employed. Profiles down to the pA range were measured with this method for the first time. For currents ranging from 1 pA to 3 μA, the integral of the profile was found to be linear with respect to the beam current, which can be measured by this detector with an accuracy of ~1%. The profile was determined with a spatial resolution of 0.25 mm. For currents ranging from 5 μA to 20 μA, thermal effects affect light yield and transmission, causing distortions of the profile and limitations in monitoring capabilities. For currents higher than ~1 μA, non-doped optical fibers for both producing and transporting scintillation light were also successfully employed.


Journal of Instrumentation | 2016

Multi-channel front-end board for SiPM readout

M. Auger; A. Ereditato; D. Goeldi; I. Kreslo; D. Lorca; M. Luethi; C. Rudolf von Rohr; J. Sinclair; M. Weber

We describe a novel high-speed front-end electronic board (FEB) for interfacing an array of 32 Silicon Photo-multipliers (SiPM) with a computer. The FEB provides individually adjustable bias for the SiPMs, and performs low-noise analog signal amplification, conditioning and digitization. It provides event timing information accurate to 1.3 ns RMS. The signal-to-noise ratio of 12 is attained for the first photo-electron peak. The back-end data interface is realized on the basis of 100 Mbps Ethernet. The design allows daisy-chaining of up to 256 units into one network interface, thus enabling compact and efficient readout schemes for multi-channel scintillating detectors, using SiPMs as photo-sensors.


Applied Radiation and Isotopes | 2017

Measurement of 43Sc and 44Sc production cross-section with an 18 MeV medical PET cyclotron

Tommaso Stefano Carzaniga; M. Auger; Saverio Braccini; Maruta Bunka; A. Ereditato; Konrad Pawel Nesteruk; P. Scampoli; A. Türler; Nicholas P. van der Meulen

43Sc and 44Sc are positron emitter radionuclides that, in conjunction with the β- emitter 47Sc, represent one of the most promising possibilities for theranostics in nuclear medicine. Their availability in suitable quantity and quality for medical applications is an open issue and their production with medical cyclotrons represents a scientific and technological challenge. For this purpose, an accurate knowledge of the production cross sections is mandatory. In this paper, we report on the cross section measurement of the reactions 43Ca(p,n)43Sc, 44Ca(p,2n) 43Sc, 46Ti(p,α)43Sc, and 44Ca(p,n)44Sc at the Bern University Hospital cyclotron. A study of the production yield and purity performed by using commercially available enriched target materials is also presented.

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