1. Low-Threshold Response of a Scintillating Xenon Bubble Chamber to Nuclear and Electronic Recoils
- Author
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Alfonso-Pita, E., Behnke, E., Bressler, M., Broerman, B., Clark, K., Coppejans, R., Corbett, J., Crisler, M., Dahl, C. E., Dering, K., Croix, A. de St., Durnford, D., Giampa, P., Hall, J., Harris, O., Hawley-Herrera, H., Lamb, N., Laurin, M., Levine, I., Lippincott, W. H., Neilson, R., Piro, M. -C., Pyda, D., Sheng, Z., Sweeney, G., Vázquez-Jáuregui, E., Westerdale, S., Whitis, T. J., Wright, A., Zhang, J., Zhang, R., and Zuñiga-Reyes, A.
- Subjects
Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,High Energy Physics - Experiment ,Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
A device filled with pure xenon first demonstrated the ability to operate simultaneously as a bubble chamber and scintillation detector in 2017. Initial results from data taken at thermodynamic thresholds down to ~4 keV showed sensitivity to ~20 keV nuclear recoils with no observable bubble nucleation by $\gamma$-ray interactions. This paper presents results from further operation of the same device at thermodynamic thresholds as low as 0.50 keV, hardware limited. The bubble chamber has now been shown to have sensitivity to ~1 keV nuclear recoils while remaining insensitive to bubble nucleation by $\gamma$-rays. A robust calibration of the chamber's nuclear recoil nucleation response, as a function of nuclear recoil energy and thermodynamic state, is presented. Stringent upper limits are established for the probability of bubble nucleation by $\gamma$-ray-induced Auger cascades, with a limit of $<1.1\times10^{-6}$ set at 0.50 keV, the lowest thermodynamic threshold explored., Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures
- Published
- 2024