论文标题
低阈值暗物质和中微子检测器中低能事件的来源
Sources of Low-Energy Events in Low-Threshold Dark Matter and Neutrino Detectors
论文作者
论文摘要
我们讨论了子GEV暗物质搜索的几种低能背景,这些背景是由与探测器材料相互作用的宇宙或放射性起源的高能颗粒引起的。我们特别关注来自电子孔对重组的Cherenkov辐射,过渡辐射和发光或声子,并表明这些过程是当前和计划中的检测器的重要背景的重要来源。我们根据各种检测策略和屏蔽水平对这些背景进行了详细的分析。我们发现,在Sensei 2020运行中,观察到的单电子事件的很大一部分来自Cherenkov光子,该光子是由船长电荷耦合器件中的高能量事件产生的,以及在同一仪器的磷掺杂层中产生的重组光子。在SuperCDMS HVEV 2020运行中,在传感器附近的印刷电路板中产生的Cherenkov光子可能解释了大多数包含2至6个电子事件的起源。在SuperCDMS Snolab,位于检测器的铜侧壁或铜侧壁上的放射性污染物将产生许多Cherenkov光子,这可能主导低能背景。对于Edelweiss实验,Cherenkov或发光背景是其观察到的事件率的亚限制,但仍然可以限制其未来搜索的敏感性。我们还指出,Cherenkov辐射,过渡辐射和重组可能是未来实验的重要背景来源,旨在通过闪烁或声子信号检测到暗物质。我们还讨论了我们结果对开发超导量子的发展的含义,并且对相干中微子散射的较低阈值搜索以及可以实施的设计策略发表评论以减轻这些背景。
We discuss several low-energy backgrounds to sub-GeV dark matter searches, which arise from high-energy particles of cosmic or radioactive origin that interact with detector materials. We focus in particular on Cherenkov radiation, transition radiation, and luminescence or phonons from electron-hole pair recombination, and show that these processes are an important source of backgrounds at both current and planned detectors. We perform detailed analyses of these backgrounds at several existing and proposed experiments based on a wide variety of detection strategies and levels of shielding. We find that a large fraction of the observed single-electron events in the SENSEI 2020 run originate from Cherenkov photons generated by high-energy events in the Skipper Charge Coupled Device, and from recombination photons generated in a phosphorus-doped layer of the same instrument. In a SuperCDMS HVeV 2020 run, Cherenkov photons produced in printed-circuit-boards located near the sensor likely explain the origin of most of the events containing 2 to 6 electrons. At SuperCDMS SNOLAB, radioactive contaminants inside the Cirlex located inside or on the copper side walls of their detectors will produce many Cherenkov photons, which could dominate the low-energy backgrounds. For the EDELWEISS experiment, Cherenkov or luminescence backgrounds are subdominant to their observed event rate, but could still limit the sensitivity of their future searches. We also point out that Cherenkov radiation, transition radiation, and recombination could be a significant source of backgrounds at future experiments aiming to detect dark-matter via scintillation or phonon signals. We also discuss the implications of our results for the development of superconducting qubits and low-threshold searches for coherent neutrino scattering, and comment on design strategies that can be implemented to mitigate these backgrounds.