21–23 Sept 2022
University of Warsaw Library
Europe/Warsaw timezone

Calibrating the scintillation and ionization responses of xenon recoils for high-energy dark matter searches

22 Sept 2022, 09:15
15m
316A (University of Warsaw Library)

316A

University of Warsaw Library

ul. Dobra 56/66, 00-312 Warszawa‎
Presentation Detector techniques (HV, purification, cryogenics, calibration etc.) Properties of noble liquids

Speaker

Teal Pershing (Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory)

Description

Liquid xenon-based direct detection dark matter experiments have recently expanded their searches to include high-energy nuclear recoil events as motivated by effective field theory dark matter and inelastic dark matter interaction models, but few xenon recoil calibrations above 100 keV are currently available. In this presentation, we show our measurements of the scintillation and ionization yields of xenon recoils up to 426 keV. The experiment uses 14.1 MeV neutrons to scatter off xenon in a compact liquid xenon time projection chamber and produce quasi-monoenergetic xenon recoils between 39 keV and 426 keV. We present the xenon recoil responses and their electric field-dependence for recoil energies up to 306 keV; due to the low event statistics and the relatively mild field dependence, the yield values at higher energies are reported as the average of xenon responses for electric fields between 0.2-2.0 kV/cm. This result will enable xenon-based dark matter experiments to significantly increase their high energy dark matter sensitivities by including energy regions that were previously inaccessible due to lack of calibrations.

Primary authors

Teal Pershing (Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory) Mr Daniel Naim (UC Davis) Dr Brian Lenardo (Stanford University) Dr Jingke Xu (Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory) Mr James Kingston (U.C. Davis) Eli Mizrachi (University of Maryland) Dr Vladimir Mozin (Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory) Dr Phillip Kerr (Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory) Dr Sergey Pereverzev Dr Adam Bernstein (Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory) Dr Mani Tripathi (U.C. Davis)

Presentation materials