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Rock Neutron Backgrounds from FNAL Neutrino Beamlines in the $ν$BDX-DRIFT Detector

Authors :
Sierra, D. Aristizabal
Barrow, J. L.
Dutta, B.
Kim, D.
Snowden-Ifft, D.
Strigari, L.
Wood, M. H.
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
arXiv, 2022.

Abstract

The $ν$BDX-DRIFT collaboration seeks to detect low-energy nuclear recoils from CE$ν$NS or BSM interactions at FNAL. Backgrounds due to rock neutrons are an important concern. We present a~\texttt{GENIE} and~\texttt{GEANT4} based model to estimate backgrounds from rock neutrons produced in neutrino-nucleus interactions within the rock walls surrounding the underground halls. This model was bench-marked against the $2009$ COUPP experiment performed in the MINOS hall in the NuMI neutrino beam, and agreement is found between experimental results and the modeled result to within $30\%$. Working from this validated model, a similar two-stage simulation was performed to estimate recoil backgrounds in the $ν$BDX-DRIFT detector across several beamlines. In the first stage utilizing~\texttt{GEANT4}, neutrons were tallied exiting the walls of a rectangular underground hall utilizing four different neutrino beam configurations. These results are presented for use by other underground experiments requiring estimations of their rock neutron backgrounds. For $ν$BDX-DRIFT, the second stage propagated neutrons from the walls and recorded energy deposited within a scintillator veto surrounding the detector and nuclear recoils within the detector's fiducial volume. The directional signal from the $ν$BDX-DRIFT detector allows additional background subtraction. A sample calculation of a $10\,$m$^3\cdot\,$yr exposure to the NuMI Low Energy (LE) beam configuration shows a CE$ν$NS signal-to-noise ratio of $\sim$2.5.<br />Accepted by PRD. Covered by SCOAP

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........f4d12e57a21300cd1040f4cd005b05ac
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.2210.08612