Author:
Qi Jianyang,Hood Noah,Kopec Abigail,Ma Yue,Xu Haiwen,Zhong Min,Ni Kaixuan
Abstract
Abstract
Liquid xenon (LXe) is a well-studied detector medium to
search for rare events in dark matter and neutrino
physics. Two-phase xenon time projection chambers (TPCs) can detect
electronic and nuclear recoils with energy down to kilo-electron
volts (keV). In this paper, we characterize the response of a
single-phase liquid xenon proportional scintillation counter
(LXePSC), which produces electroluminescence directly in the
liquid, to detect electronic recoils at low energies. Our design
uses a thin (10–25 μm diameter), central anode wire in a
cylindrical LXe target where ionization electrons, created from
radiation particles, drift radially towards the anode, and
electroluminescence is produced. Both the primary scintillation (S1)
and electroluminescence (S2) are detected by photomultiplier tubes
(PMTs) surrounding the LXe target. Up to 17 photons are produced per
electron, obtained with a 10 μm diameter anode wire, allowing
for the highly efficient detection of electronic recoils from beta
decays of a tritium source down to ∼ 1 keV. Single electrons,
from photoemission of the cathode wires, are observed at a gain of
1.8 photoelectrons (PE) per electron. The delayed signals following
the S2 signals are dominated by single-photon-like hits, without
evidence for electron signals observed in the two-phase xenon
TPCs. We discuss the potential application of such a LXePSC for
reactor neutrino detection via Coherent Elastic Neutrino Nucleus
Scattering (CEνNS).
Subject
Mathematical Physics,Instrumentation
Cited by
3 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献