| Literature DB >> 29706795 |
H Shi1,2,3, E Milotti4, S Bartalucci1, M Bazzi1, S Bertolucci5, A M Bragadireanu1,6, M Cargnelli1,2, A Clozza1, L De Paolis1, S Di Matteo7, J-P Egger8, H Elnaggar9, C Guaraldo1, M Iliescu1, M Laubenstein10, J Marton1,2, M Miliucci1, A Pichler1,2, D Pietreanu1,6, K Piscicchia1,11, A Scordo1, D L Sirghi1,6, F Sirghi1,6, L Sperandio1, O Vazquez Doce1,12, E Widmann2, J Zmeskal1,2, C Curceanu1,6,11.
Abstract
The VIolation of Pauli exclusion principle -2 experiment, or VIP-2 experiment, at the Laboratori Nazionali del Gran Sasso searches for X-rays from copper atomic transitions that are prohibited by the Pauli exclusion principle. Candidate direct violation events come from the transition of a 2p electron to the ground state that is already occupied by two electrons. From the first data taking campaign in 2016 of VIP-2 experiment, we determined a best upper limit of [Formula: see text] for the probability that such a violation exists. Significant improvement in the control of the experimental systematics was also achieved, although not explicitly reflected in the improved upper limit. By introducing a simultaneous spectral fit of the signal and background data in the analysis, we succeeded in taking into account systematic errors that could not be evaluated previously in this type of measurements.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29706795 PMCID: PMC5910465 DOI: 10.1140/epjc/s10052-018-5802-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Phys J C Part Fields ISSN: 1434-6044 Impact factor: 4.590
Fig. 1The side views of the design of the core components of the VIP-2 setup, including the SDDs as the X-ray detector, the scintillators as active shielding with silicon photomultiplier readout
Fig. 2a The diagram of the components of the experiment and their configuration; b a picture of the VIP-2 setup in operation at the underground laboratory of Gran Sasso
Fig. 3Perspective views of the VIP-2 apparatus with passive shielding, with the dimensions in cm. Nitrogen gas with a slight over pressure with respect to the outside air will be circulated inside the plastic shielding
Fig. 4a The holder of the source with the Fe-55 source inside covered by a thick high purity titanium foil; b a photo of the holder mounted near the copper strip and the SDDs
Fig. 5The diagram of the trigger logic. The essential parts are highlighted with explanations in the article
Fig. 6a A typical fit to the PADC data from one SDD for 1 week; b the peak position of the titanium from calibration fit to each data subset over the full data taking period, note that most of the statistical errors are smaller than the radius of the plot dots
Fig. 7The energy spectra of six individual SDD units; data taking with current: dashed lines; data taking without current: solid lines. Copper lines are not visible with a linear vertical axis scale. All spectra are in their full statistics without normalization with exposure time
Fig. 8A global chi-square function was used to fit simultaneously the spectra with and without 100 A current applied to the copper conductor. The energy position for the expected PEP violating events is about 300 eV below the normal copper transition. The Gaussian function and the tail part of the components and the continuous background from the fit result are also plotted. a The fit to the wide energy range from eV to 11 keV, b the fit and its residual for the 7–11 keV range where there is no background coming from the calibration source. See the main text for details
Free parameters for the simultaneous fit function. Common parameters are placed in the center of the two middle columns
| Parameters | 100 A current | No current | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| First order polynomial function |
|
| Continuous background |
| Energy-dependent |
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| Fano factor |
| resolution parameters |
|
| Energy-independent noise contribution |
| Energy scale shift |
|
| Non-linearity at Cu |
| Background from fluorescence X-rays. |
|
| Intensities of Cu |
|
|
| Mean value of Cu | |
|
|
| Mean value of Cu | |
|
|
| Cu | |
|
|
| Ni | |
| PEP violating component | CuPEPAmp | Intensity of PEP violating component |
Fig. 9a The geometry of the setup used in the Geant4 simulation; b a comparison between the 28 days of no current data and the simulated energy spectrum (the inset) of six SDDs from 30 days of data taking without current. The input of the background source is the gamma radiation, with the rate and energy distribution taken from published measurement inside the tunnel of the Gran Sasso laboratory
Fig. 10Past results from PEP violation tests for electrons with a copper conductor, together with the result from this work and the anticipated goal of VIP-2 experiment. The result (1) is based on the same data set of this work, but using the spectra subtraction in the analysis
Energy shift and transition probability of vPp-atomic transitions for copper
| Transition | Experimental energy (eV) | Calculated non-vPp (eV) | Calculated vPp: energy (eV) and transition probability ( | Calc. energy diff. non-vPp − vPp (eV) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 8027.83 | 8027.85 | 7728.92 | 2.5690970E | 298.93 | |
| 8047.78 | 8047.79 | 7746.73 | 2.6372675E | 301.06 | |
| 8905.29 | 8905.41 | 8531.69 | 2.6737747E | 373.72 | |
| 929.70 | 929.72 | 822.83 | 3.4922759E | 106.89 | |
| 949.80 | 949.84 | 841.91 | 3.0154308E | 107.93 | |
| 8979.00 | 8977.14 | 8570.82 | 1.2125697E | 406.32 | |