| Literature DB >> 30839752 |
O Azzolini1, M T Barrera1, J W Beeman2, F Bellini3,4, M Beretta5,6, M Biassoni6, E Bossio3,4, C Brofferio5,6, C Bucci7, L Canonica7,8, S Capelli5,6, L Cardani4, P Carniti5,6, N Casali4, L Cassina5,6, M Clemenza5,6, O Cremonesi6, A Cruciani4, A D'Addabbo7,9, I Dafinei4, S Di Domizio10,11, F Ferroni3,4, L Gironi5,6, A Giuliani12,13, P Gorla7, C Gotti5,6, G Keppel1, M Martinez3,4,14, S Morganti4, S Nagorny7,9,15, M Nastasi5,6, S Nisi7, C Nones16, D Orlandi7, L Pagnanini5,6, M Pallavicini10,11, V Palmieri1, L Pattavina7,9, M Pavan5,6, G Pessina6, V Pettinacci3,4, S Pirro7, S Pozzi5,6, E Previtali6, A Puiu5,6, C Rusconi7,17, K Schäffner9, C Tomei4, M Vignati4, A Zolotarova16.
Abstract
The suppression of spurious events in the region of interest for neutrinoless double beta decay will play a major role in next generation experiments. The background of detectors based on the technology of cryogenic calorimeters is expected to be dominated by α particles, that could be disentangled from double beta decay signals by exploiting the difference in the emission of the scintillation light. CUPID-0, an array of enriched Zn 82 Se scintillating calorimeters, is the first large mass demonstrator of this technology. The detector started data-taking in 2017 at the Laboratori Nazionali del Gran Sasso with the aim of proving that dual read-out of light and heat allows for an efficient suppression of the α background. In this paper we describe the software tools we developed for the analysis of scintillating calorimeters and we demonstrate that this technology allows to reach an unprecedented background for cryogenic calorimeters.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30839752 PMCID: PMC6190965 DOI: 10.1140/epjc/s10052-018-6202-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Phys J C Part Fields ISSN: 1434-6044 Impact factor: 4.590
Fig. 1Left: a typical template of a ZnSe response (black line) overlapped to a single pulse acquired by the same detector (magenta line). The signal template was evaluated averaging hundreds of pulses in order to suppress the random noise fluctuations. Right: the typical average noise power spectrum of a ZnSe detector. The microphonic noise picks and the roll-off due to the anti-aliasing active Bessel filter are clearly visible
Fig. 2Left: decay-time (see definition in text) of pulses recorded by a ZnSe crystal as a function of the energy. Right: same parameter after the removal of the energy-dependency
Fig. 3Left: efficiency as a function of the integer value at which the scaled shape parameter is cut. Dots: efficiency computed using the peak of Zn; Triangles: efficiency computed on the side-bands of the peak. Right: ratio /; the vertical dotted line represents the chosen cut value. These plots refer to the scaled decay-time, the other parameters show the same behaviour
Fig. 4peak of Zn recorded in half a DataSet (even events). Top: events that pass the pulse-shape cuts and the anti-coincidence cut. Bottom: events rejected by the pulse-shape cuts. We fit both the plots simultaneously with an unbinned extended maximum likelihood fit with two components: a Gaussian function and an exponential background using the RooFit analysis framework
Fig. 5Study of the most prominent peaks of Co, calibrated with the coefficients derived from the calibration. Left: difference between the nominal energy and the peak position as a function of the energy. Data are fitted with a parabolic function, resulting in 1.3 keV residual at the Q-value. Right: FWHM energy resolution as a function of the energy (black squares). Data are fitted with a linear function . The red circle indicates the value extrapolated from the calibration in Ref. [63]
Fig. 6The light recorded by the LD placed on top of the ZnSe is reported as a function of the heat released in the crystal. The heat axis is energy-calibrated using the most intense peaks produced by the source. On the contrary, the light axis is not energy-calibrated (broadening the and bands). Red: pulses that pass the selection criteria to produce the signal templates, both for the heat and the light detectors. In this plot, data from all crystals are shown
Fig. 7Left: a typical template of a LD response (black line) overlapped to a single light pulse acquired by the same detector (magenta line). The signal template was evaluated averaging hundreds of light pulses emitted by the bottom ZnSe crystal in order to suppress the random noise fluctuation. Right: a typical average noise power spectrum of a LD. The microphonic noise picks and the roll-off due to the anti-aliasing active Bessel filter are clearly visible
Fig. 8Light Shape Parameter (SP) as a function of the heat released in the ZnSe (all crystals). The dashed region identifies the 400 keV region centered around the Q-value that is used for the 0DBD analysis and for the estimation of the background
Fig. 9Left: Light Shape Parameter distribution for muon-induced events as a function of the heat released in the ZnSe. The dotted black line represent the cut on SP. Right: histogram of the number of ZnSe crystals with a simultaneous trigger
Fig. 10Open histogram: high-energy / spectrum of CUPID-0 obtained with a ZnSe exposure of 3.44 kgy. Orange: the same spectrum after applying a time-veto of 3 half-lives after the detection of an particle with energy compatible with the Q-value of Bi. Blue: events that survive a time-veto of 3 half-lives after the detection of an particle with energy larger than 2 MeV
Summary of the background index (counts/keV/kg/y) and signal efficiency averaged on the DataSets exposure, measured in the region 2800–3200 keV with a ZnSe exposure of 3.44 kgy ( emittersy). Uncertainties are reported at 68 C.L.. First row: events that pass the cuts on the heat described in Sect. 6. Second row: the events are further selected requiring that the shape parameter of the light is consistent with interactions of electrons ( rejection) as described in Sect. 9. Third row: we added a time-veto of 3 half-lives after the detection of an particle with energy compatible with the Q-value of Bi. Fourth row: we added a time-veto of 3 half-lives after the detection of an particle with energy larger than 2 MeV. Last row: we report the total efficiency, including the data selection efficiency computed as in fourth row, the trigger efficiency, and the electrons containment efficiency of () % (see Ref [63])
| Event selection | Background Index | Efficiency |
|---|---|---|
| [ | [ | |
| Heat | (3.6 | 95 |
| Heat + | (1.5 | 95 |
| Heat + veto with | 5.1 | 94.5±2% |
| Heat + veto with all | 3.6 | 93 |
| Total signal efficiency | 3.6 | 75±2% |