investigating methods of neutrinoless double-beta decay detection

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Investigating Methods of Neutrinoless Double-Beta Decay Detection. Matthew Rose Supervisor: Dr. R. Saakyan 4C00 Project Talk 13th March 2007. Talk Overview. An explanation of 0 nbb decay. What can be learnt from 0 nbb decay? The Super-NEMO detector & Calorimeter design. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Investigating Methods of Neutrinoless Double-Beta

Decay Detection

Matthew Rose

Supervisor: Dr. R. Saakyan

4C00 Project Talk

13th March 2007

Matthew Rose 4C00 Project Talk 2

Talk Overview

• An explanation of 0 decay. • What can be learnt from 0 decay?• The Super-NEMO detector & Calorimeter design.• Why is Energy Resolution Important?• How do we improve Energy Resolution?• Studying Scintillators & Photomultipliers.• Results & Achieved Energy Resolutions.• Applications.• Comparison with Previous Results.

Matthew Rose 4C00 Project Talk 3

2 decay is the simultaneous decay of

two neutrons to two protons, by emission of

2 e- and 2 e.

decay

0 decay does the same, but by

simultaneous emission of a e and absorption of a e, to conserve lepton

number.

Matthew Rose 4C00 Project Talk 4

What can 0 decay teach us?

• Nature of the (Majorana or Dirac)• Place limits on the effective mass of the

, h m i, by finding the half life of 0 events.

(T1/20)-1 = (h mi /me)2G0 |M0|2 / log(2)

(uncertainties depend on matrix element calculations)

T1/20 / h m i-2

Matthew Rose 4C00 Project Talk 5

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Why is 0 so hard to find?

• 0 is very rare (T1/2

0> 1025yr), only ~1 in 105 events is estimated to be a 0

• The energies of 2 and 0are quite distinct, however…

Matthew Rose 4C00 Project Talk 6

Why is 0 so hard to find?

Tiny energy signature, easily lost amongst background radiation

Matthew Rose 4C00 Project Talk 7

Detecting Events - Super-NEMO

• Super-NEMO will look for 0 decays

• source foil surrounded by tracking volume and Calorimeter (PMTs and Scintillators)

Light output (Nph)/ Ee

Nph x Q.E. = Npe

Matthew Rose 4C00 Project Talk 8

E/E, the Energy Resolution

• Npe follows a poisson distribution, so

EE

=FWHM

E=

2.35σ

E

σ = mean = N pe

EE

=2.35

N pe

• The energy resolution is related to the spread of the energy spectrum.

• Current E/E = 14% at 1 MeV.

• Aiming for 7% at 1 MeV, need an improvement in Npe by a factor of 4.

Matthew Rose 4C00 Project Talk 9

PMTs & Scintillators

• Must match Q.E. to wavelength of maximum emission.

• To do so, need to accurately know the emission spectra of the scintillators.

• Using a miniature spectrometer, can achieve this.

• First, does the spectrometer work?• Can Laser or X-rays be used to approximate

decays?• What are the W.O.M.E. for the scintillators?

Matthew Rose 4C00 Project Talk 10

Spectrometer range = 340-1000nm?

• Spectra of LEDs taken to test sensitivity around the 400-500nm region (region of scintillators)

• Consistent results give confidence in the sensitivity of spectrometer at these wavelengths.

• Now can take spectra of Scintillators…

470nm470nm

403.5nm403.5nm

475nm475nm

Matthew Rose 4C00 Project Talk 11

Spectrometer Setup

• Laser hits scintillator, produces light• Light travels along fibre to spectrometer• Data from spectrometer is stored on Laptop• Data analysed using ROOT• Four different scintillator samples studied - Bicron

because of high light output.• >80 spectra were taken for laser results alone, with

various orientations of laser and scintillator.

Matthew Rose 4C00 Project Talk 12

Laser Spectra

Each has 5 unscaled spectra, they are so similar that any onecan be used for analysis. Background light is negligible.

Matthew Rose 4C00 Project Talk 13

Laser vs. X-ray spectra

• Repeated with X-rays for all but BC-408.• Little difference between the spectra produced.• Decided that Laser can be used to simulate

ionizing radiation.• Can therefore take wavelengths of maximum

emission from Laser plots.

Matthew Rose 4C00 Project Talk 14

Final Emission Spectra

Matthew Rose 4C00 Project Talk 15

Finding E/E

• A fit accounting for the K, L and M energies gives us σK and EK.

• 207Bi is used to produce particles, as it has 2 conversion electrons at 494 and 967 keV.

• 207Bi is a AND source.• can be stopped easily, so

+ and are taken.

• The two spectra are normalised about the region of only. Subtracting the spectra should now give the energy spectrum.

Matthew Rose 4C00 Project Talk 16

Finding E/E

2.35σ K

EK

=7.90%2.35σ K

EK

=819%

Matthew Rose 4C00 Project Talk 17

Finding E/E

2.35σ K

EK

=104%

Matthew Rose 4C00 Project Talk 18

Results

Scintillator

of max emission (nm) E/E (%)

(with Hamamatsu R6233MOD PMT)Bicron Measured

BC-404 408 414-420 7.8

BC-408 425 426-468 8.2

BC-412 434 432-436(424-8 also noted)

10.4

Karkhov - 418-425 -

Matthew Rose 4C00 Project Talk 19

Comparison with Previous Results

Scintillator Coating E/E, %

BC-404 None 9.4

BC-404 Mylar 7.8

BC-404 Tyvec 8.2

BC-404 Mylar/Tyvec 7.4

BC-408 None 9.7

BC-408 Mylar 8.2

BC-408 Tyvec 8.5

BC-408 Mylar/Tyvec 7.7

• Previous investigations have seen better E/E with other coverings.

• Have only investigated Mylar covering, variations may further improve E/E.

Matthew Rose 4C00 Project Talk 20

Results

• Target E/E of 7% at 1 MeV seems within reach.

• The R6233 used has Q.E.max of 34.9% at 350 nm.

• Multiplying normalised spectra by Q.E. and Light Outputs can give interesting plots.

• The integral of this plot is proportional to Npe.

Matthew Rose 4C00 Project Talk 21

Using the Integrals E/E / (Npe)-1/2; I = N£ Q.E. = Npe

E/E £ (Npe)1/2 = constant

Should find:

I404 ' I408 because E/E404 ' E/E408

I404 > I412 because E/E404 < E/E412

Using measured Karkhov spectra, can find light output (55 % Anthracene) and use this to scale

the spectrum before multiplying by Q.E.

Can get a (very) rough idea of E/Ekarkhov using mean of constants.

Matthew Rose 4C00 Project Talk 22

Using the Integrals

ScintillatorLight Output

(% Anthracene)E/E (%)

Integral

(I / Npe)E/E * (I)1/2

BC-404 68 7.8 17.183 32.33

BC-408 64 8.2 17.283 34.09

BC-412 60 10.4 12.819 37.24

Karkhov from spectra = 55 9.1 14.261 mean = 34.55

Matthew Rose 4C00 Project Talk 23

Comparing integrals ( ?)

8.5%, 13.2%, 5.2% differences, acceptable for rough estimate of E/E:

E/Ekarkhov' 9.25§0.65%

E / E408

ΔE / E412

= 0.788,N pe412

N pe408

= 0.861

E / E404

ΔE / E412

= 0.750,N pe412

N pe404

= 0.864

E / E404

ΔE / E408

= 0.951,N pe408

N pe404

= 1.003

E/E (A)

ΔE/E (B)=

N pe(B)

N pe(A)

Matthew Rose 4C00 Project Talk 24

Summary• Aiming for 7% E/E at 1 MeV.• Have achieved 7.8% at 967 keV.• This can be improved with change of

scintillator covering and possibly through use of a Green-extended PMT.

• Have a convenient & quick way to verify emission spectra of scintillators.

• Can estimate E/E with reasonable precision from emission & Q.E. spectra, which can be used to pre-judge suitability of scintillators before testing and also to check results.

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