학술논문

NEXT-CRAB-0: A High Pressure Gaseous Xenon Time Projection Chamber with a Direct VUV Camera Based Readout
Document Type
Working Paper
Author
NEXT CollaborationByrnes, N. K.Parmaksiz, I.Adams, C.Asaadi, J.Baeza-Rubio, JBailey, K.Church, E.González-Díaz, D.Higley, A.Jones, B. J. P.Mistry, K.Moya, I. A.Nygren, D. R.Oyedele, P.Rogers, L.Stogsdill, K.Almazán, H.Álvarez, V.Aparicio, B.Aranburu, A. I.Arazi, L.Arnquist, I. J.Ayet, S.Azevedo, C. D. R.Ballester, F.del Barrio-Torregrosa, M.Bayo, A.Benlloch-Rodríguez, J. M.Borges, F. I. G. M.Bounasser, S.Cárcel, S.Carrión, J. V.Cebrián, S.Cid, L.Conde, C. A. N.Contreras, T.Cossío, F. P.Dey, E.Díaz, G.Dickel, T.Elorza, M.Escada, J.Esteve, R.Fahs, A.Felkai, R.Fernandes, L. M. P.Ferrario, P.Ferreira, A. L.Foss, F. W.Freitas, E. D. C.Freixa, Z.Generowicz, J.Goldschmidt, A.Gómez-Cadenas, J. J.González, R.Grocott, J.Guenette, R.Haefner, J.Hafidi, K.Hauptman, J.Henriques, C. A. O.Morata, J. A. HernandoHerrero-Gómez, P.Herrero, V.Carrete, C. HervésHo, J.Ho, P.Ifergan, Y.Labarga, L.Larizgoitia, L.Lebrun, P.Lopez, FGutierrez, D. LopezLópez-March, N.Madigan, R.Mano, R. D. P.Marques, A. P.Martín-Albo, J.Martínez-Lema, G.Martínez-Vara, M.Meziani, Z. E.Miller, R. L.Monrabal, F.Monteiro, C. M. B.Mora, F. J.Vidal, J. MuñozNavarro, K. E.Novella, P.Nuñez, A.Oblak, E.Odriozola-Gimeno, M.Palacio, J.Palmeiro, B.Para, A.Pelegrin, JManeiro, M. PérezQuerol, M.Redwine, A. B.Renner, J.Rivilla, I.Rodríguez, J.Rogero, C.Romeo, B.Romo-Luque, C.Santos, F. P.Santos, J. M. F. dosSimón, A.Soleti, S. R.Sorel, M.Stanford, C.Teixeira, J. M. R.Toledo, J. F.Torrent, J.Usón, A.Veloso, J. F. C. A.Vuong, T. T.Waiton, J.White, J. T.
Source
Subject
Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors
Language
Abstract
The search for neutrinoless double beta decay ($0\nu\beta\beta$) remains one of the most compelling experimental avenues for the discovery in the neutrino sector. Electroluminescent gas-phase time projection chambers are well suited to $0\nu\beta\beta$ searches due to their intrinsically precise energy resolution and topological event identification capabilities. Scalability to ton- and multi-ton masses requires readout of large-area electroluminescent regions with fine spatial resolution, low radiogenic backgrounds, and a scalable data acquisition system. This paper presents a detector prototype that records event topology in an electroluminescent xenon gas TPC via VUV image-intensified cameras. This enables an extendable readout of large tracking planes with commercial devices that reside almost entirely outside of the active medium.Following further development in intermediate scale demonstrators, this technique may represent a novel and enlargeable method for topological event imaging in $0\nu\beta\beta$.
Comment: 30 Pages, 22 figures, Updated to match current JINST submission