R. Resch
Stanford University
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Featured researches published by R. Resch.
Physical Review Letters | 2011
Z. Ahmed; D. S. Akerib; S. Arrenberg; C. N. Bailey; D. Balakishiyeva; L. Baudis; D. A. Bauer; P. L. Brink; T. Bruch; R. Bunker; B. Cabrera; David O. Caldwell; J. Cooley; E. Do Couto E Silva; P. Cushman; M. Daal; F. DeJongh; P. Di Stefano; M. R. Dragowsky; L. Duong; S. Fallows; E. Figueroa-Feliciano; J. Filippini; J. Fox; M. Fritts; S. R. Golwala; J. Hall; R. Hennings-Yeomans; S. A. Hertel; D. Holmgren
We report results from a reanalysis of data from the Cryogenic Dark Matter Search (CDMS II) experiment at the Soudan Underground Laboratory. Data taken between October 2006 and September 2008 using eight germanium detectors are reanalyzed with a lowered, 2 keV recoil-energy threshold, to give increased sensitivity to interactions from weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPs) with masses below ∼10 GeV/c(2). This analysis provides stronger constraints than previous CDMS II results for WIMP masses below 9 GeV/c(2) and excludes parameter space associated with possible low-mass WIMP signals from the DAMA/LIBRA and CoGeNT experiments.
Physical Review Letters | 2014
R. Agnese; A. J. Anderson; M. Asai; D. Balakishiyeva; R. Basu Thakur; D. A. Bauer; J. Beaty; J. Billard; A. W. Borgland; M. A. Bowles; D. Brandt; P. L. Brink; R. Bunker; B. Cabrera; David O. Caldwell; D. G. Cerdeno; H. Chagani; Yan Chen; M. Cherry; J. Cooley; B. Cornell; C. H. Crewdson; P. Cushman; M. Daal; D. Devaney; P. Di Stefano; E. Do Couto E Silva; T. Doughty; L. Esteban; S. Fallows
We report a first search for weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPs) using the background rejection capabilities of SuperCDMS. An exposure of 577 kg-days was analyzed for WIMPs with mass < 30 GeV/c2, with the signal region blinded. Eleven events were observed after unblinding. We set an upper limit on the spin-independent WIMP-nucleon cross section of 1.2e-42 cm2 at 8 GeV/c2. This result is in tension with WIMP interpretations of recent experiments and probes new parameter space for WIMP-nucleon scattering for WIMP masses < 6 GeV/c2.
Physical Review Letters | 2014
R. Agnese; A. J. Anderson; M. Asai; D. Balakishiyeva; R. Basu Thakur; D. A. Bauer; J. Beaty; J. Billard; A. W. Borgland; M. A. Bowles; D. Brandt; P. L. Brink; R. Bunker; B. Cabrera; David O. Caldwell; D. G. Cerdeno; H. Chagani; Yan Chen; M. Cherry; J. Cooley; B. Cornell; C. H. Crewdson; P. Cushman; M. Daal; D. Devaney; P. Di Stefano; E. Do Couto E Silva; T. Doughty; L. Esteban; S. Fallows
We report a first search for weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPs) using the background rejection capabilities of SuperCDMS. An exposure of 577 kg-days was analyzed for WIMPs with mass < 30 GeV/c2, with the signal region blinded. Eleven events were observed after unblinding. We set an upper limit on the spin-independent WIMP-nucleon cross section of 1.2e-42 cm2 at 8 GeV/c2. This result is in tension with WIMP interpretations of recent experiments and probes new parameter space for WIMP-nucleon scattering for WIMP masses < 6 GeV/c2.
Applied Physics Letters | 2013
R. Agnese; A. J. Anderson; D. Balakishiyeva; R. Basu Thakur; D. A. Bauer; A. W. Borgland; D. Brandt; P. L. Brink; R. Bunker; B. Cabrera; David O. Caldwell; D. G. Cerdeno; H. Chagani; M. Cherry; J. Cooley; B. Cornell; C. H. Crewdson; P. Cushman; M. Daal; P. Di Stefano; E. Do Couto E Silva; T. Doughty; L. Esteban; S. Fallows; E. Figueroa-Feliciano; J. Fox; M. Fritts; G. Godfrey; S. R. Golwala; J. Hall
The SuperCDMS experiment in the Soudan Underground Laboratory searches for dark matter with a 9-kg array of cryogenic germanium detectors. Symmetric sensors on opposite sides measure both charge and phonons from each particle interaction, providing excellent discrimination between electron and nuclear recoils, and between surface and interior events. Surface event rejection capabilities were tested with two ^(210)Pb sources producing ∼130 beta decays/hr. In ∼800 live hours, no events leaked into the 8–115 keV signal region, giving upper limit leakage fraction 1.7 × 10^(−5) at 90% C.L., corresponding to < 0.6 surface event background in the future 200-kg SuperCDMS SNOLAB experiment.
Physical Review D | 2011
Z. Ahmed; D. S. Akerib; S. Arrenberg; C. N. Bailey; D. Balakishiyeva; L. Baudis; D. A. Bauer; P. L. Brink; T. Bruch; R. Bunker; B. Cabrera; David O. Caldwell; J. Cooley; E. Do Couto E Silva; P. Cushman; M. Daal; F. DeJongh; P. Di Stefano; M. R. Dragowsky; L. Duong; S. Fallows; E. Figueroa-Feliciano; J. Filippini; J. Fox; M. Fritts; S. R. Golwala; J. Hall; R. Hennings-Yeomans; S. A. Hertel; D. Holmgren
Results are presented from a reanalysis of the entire five-tower data set acquired with the Cryogenic Dark Matter Search (CDMS II) experiment at the Soudan Underground Laboratory, with an exposure of 969 kg-days. The analysis window was extended to a recoil energy of 150 keV, and an improved surface-event background-rejection cut was defined to increase the sensitivity of the experiment to the inelastic dark matter (iDM) model. Three dark matter candidates were found between 25 keV and 150 keV. The probability to observe three or more background events in this energy range is 11%. Because of the occurrence of these events, the constraints on the iDM parameter space are slightly less stringent than those from our previous analysis, which used an energy window of 10–100 keV.
Szczerbinska, Barbara & Babu, Kaladi & Balantekin, Baha & Dutta, Bhaskar & Mohapatra, Rabindra N. (Eds.). (2013). Workshop on dark matter, unification and neutrino physics : CETUP* 2012, South Dakota, USA, 10 July-01 August 2012. Melville, N.Y.: American Institute of Physics, pp. 129-135, AIP conference proceedings(1534) | 2013
J. Sander; Z. Ahmed; A. J. Anderson; S. Arrenberg; D. Balakishiyeva; R.B. Thakur; D. A. Bauer; D. Brandt; P. L. Brink; R. Bunker; B. Cabrera; David O. Caldwell; D. G. Cerdeno; H. Chagani; J. Cooley; B. Cornell; C. H. Crewdson; P. Cushman; M. Daal; P. Di Stefano; E. Do Couto E Silva; T. Doughty; L. Esteban; S. Fallows; E. Figueroa-Feliciano; J. Fox; M. Fritts; G. Godfrey; S. R. Golwala; J. Hall
Matter, as we know it, makes up less than 5% of the Universe. Various astrophysical observations have confirmed that one quarter of the Universe and most of the matter content in the Universe is made up of Dark Matter. The nature of Dark Matter is yet to be discovered and is one of the biggest questions in Physics. Particle Physics combined with astrophysical measurements of the abundance gives rise to a Dark Matter candidate called Weakly Interacting Massive Particle (WIMP). The low density of WIMPs in the galaxies and the extremely weak nature of the interaction with ordinary matter make detection of the WIMP an extraordinarily challenging task, with abundant fakes from various radioactive and cosmogenic backgrounds with much stronger electromagnetic interaction. The extremely weak nature of the WIMP interaction dictates detectors that have extremely low naturally occurring radioactive background, a large active volume (mass) of sensitive detector material to maximize statistics, a highly efficient detector based rejection mechanism for the dominant electromagnetic background and sophisticated analysis techniques to reject any residual background. This paper describes the status of the SuperCDMS experiment.
Journal of Applied Physics | 2011
S. W. Leman; K. A. McCarthy; P. L. Brink; B. Cabrera; M. Cherry; E. Silva E. Do Couto; E. Figueroa-Feliciano; P. Kim; N. Mirabolfathi; M. Pyle; R. Resch; B. Sadoulet; B. Serfass; K. M. Sundqvist; A. Tomada; B. A. Young
We present results on phonon quasidiffusion and Transition Edge Sensor (TES) studies in a large, 3 inch diameter, 1 inch thick [100] high purity germanium crystal, cooled to 50 mK in the vacuum of a dilution refrigerator, and exposed with 59.5 keV gamma-rays from an Am-241 calibration source. We compare calibration data with results from a Monte Carlo which includes phonon quasidiffusion and the generation of phonons created by charge carriers as they are drifted across the detector by ionization readout channels. The phonon energy is then parsed into TES based phonon readout channels and input into a TES simulator.
Proceedings of Technology and Instrumentation in Particle Physics 2014 — PoS(TIPP2014) | 2015
H. Chagani; D. A. Bauer; D. Brandt; P. L. Brink; R. Bunker; B. Cabrera; M. Cherry; G. A. Codoreanu; E. Do Couto E Silva; P. Cushman; G. Godfrey; J. Hall; S. Hansen; J. Hasi; M. H. Kelsey; A. Kennedy; C. J. Kenney; S. W. Leman; V. Mandic; N. Mirabolfathi; S. Monin; D. Q. Nagasawa; L. Novak; R. Partridge; C. Phenicie; Kim L. Page; M. Pyle; R. Radpour; W. Rau; R. Resch
H. Chagani, D. A. Bauer, D. Brandt, P. L. Brink, R. Bunker, B. Cabrera, M. Cherry, G. A. Codoreanu, E. Do Couto e Silva, P. Cushman, G. L. Godfrey, J. Hall, S. Hansen, J. Hasi, M. Kelsey, A. Kennedy, C. J. Kenney, S. W. Leman, f V. Mandic, N. Mirabolfathi, S. Monin, D. Nagasawa, L. Novak, R. Partridge, C. Phenicie, K. Page, M. Pyle, R. Radpour, W. Rau, R. Resch, B. Sadoulet, D. N. Seitz, B. Serfass, B. Shank, D. Strandberg, A. Tomada, A. N. Villano, J. Yen, B. A. Young and J. Zhang School of Physics & Astronomy, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, Batavia, IL 60510, USA SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, Menlo Park, CA 94025, USA Department of Physics, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY 13244, USA Department of Physics, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, USA f Department of Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA Department of Physics, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA Department of Physics, Physics Engineering & Astronomy, Queen’s University, Kingston, ON
Physical Review Letters | 2014
R. Agnese; A. J. Anderson; M. Asai; D. Balakishiyeva; R. Basu Thakur; D. A. Bauer; J. Beaty; J. Billard; A. W. Borgland; M. A. Bowles; D. Brandt; P. L. Brink; R. Bunker; B. Cabrera; David O. Caldwell; D. G. Cerdeno; H. Chagani; Yan Chen; M. Cherry; J. Cooley; B. Cornell; C. H. Crewdson; P. Cushman; M. Daal; D. Devaney; Pcf Di Stefano; Edce Silva; T. Doughty; L. Esteban; S. Fallows
We report a first search for weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPs) using the background rejection capabilities of SuperCDMS. An exposure of 577 kg-days was analyzed for WIMPs with mass < 30 GeV/c2, with the signal region blinded. Eleven events were observed after unblinding. We set an upper limit on the spin-independent WIMP-nucleon cross section of 1.2e-42 cm2 at 8 GeV/c2. This result is in tension with WIMP interpretations of recent experiments and probes new parameter space for WIMP-nucleon scattering for WIMP masses < 6 GeV/c2.
Chinese Journal of Physics | 2011
S. W. Leman; Mki Mit; B. Cabrera; K. A. McCarthy; M. Pyle; R. Resch; B. Sadoulet; K. M. Sundqvist; Berkeley Lbl; P. L. Brink; M. Cherry; E. Do Couto E Silva; E. Figueroa-Feliciano; N. Mirabolfathi; B. Serfass; A. Tomada