학술논문

Experimental Study of Geoneutrinos with KamLAND
Document Type
Author abstract
Source
Earth, Moon, and Planets. Dec, 2006, Vol. 99 Issue 1, p131, 16 p.
Subject
Language
English
ISSN
0167-9295
Abstract
The Kamioka liquid scintillator antineutrino detector (KamLAND), which consists of 1000 tones of ultra-pure liquid scintillator surrounded by 1879 photo-multiplier tubes (PMT), is the first detector sensitive enough to detect geoneutrinos. Earth models suggest that KamLAND observes geoneutrinos at a rate of 30 events/10.sup.32-protons/year from the 238.sup.U decay chain, and 8 events/10.sup.32-protons/year from the 232.sup.Th decay chain. With 7.09x10.sup.31 proton-years of detector exposure and detection efficiency of 0.687a+-a0.007, the 'rate-only' analysis gives 25.sub.-18.sup.+19 geoneutrino candidates. Assuming a Th/U mass concentration ratio of 3.9, the 'rate + shape' analysis gives the 90% confidence interval for the total number of geoneutrinos detected to be from 4.5 to 54.2. This result is consistent with predictions from the Earth models. The 99% C.L. upper limit is set at 1.45x10.sup.-31 events per target proton per year, which is 3.8 times higher than the central value of the model prediction that gives 16 TW of radiogenic heat production from 238.sup.U and 232.sup.Th. Although the present data have limited statistical power, they provide by direct means an upper limit for the Earth's radiogenic heat of U and Th.