Title: Investigating%20Methods%20of%20Neutrinoless%20Double-Beta%20Decay%20Detection
1Investigating Methods of Neutrinoless Double-Beta
Decay Detection
- Matthew Rose
- Supervisor Dr. R. Saakyan
- 4C00 Project Talk
- 13th March 2007
2Talk Overview
- An explanation of 0nbb decay.
- What can be learnt from 0nbb decay?
- The Super-NEMO detector Calorimeter design.
- Why is Energy Resolution Important?
- How do we improve Energy Resolution?
- Studying Scintillators Photomultipliers.
- Results Achieved Energy Resolutions.
- Applications.
- Comparison with Previous Results.
3bb decay
- 2nbb decay is the simultaneous decay of two
neutrons to two protons, by emission of 2 e- and
2 ne.
4What can 0nbb decay teach us?
- Nature of the n (Majorana or Dirac)
- Place limits on the effective mass of the n, h mn
i, by finding the half life of 0nbb events. - (T1/20n)-1 (h mni /me)2G0n M0n2 / log(2)
- (uncertainties depend on matrix element
calculations) - T1/20n / h mn i-2
5Why is 0nbb so hard to find?
- 0nbb is very rare (T1/20n gt 1025yr), only 1 in
105 bb events is estimated to be a 0nbb.
- The energies of 2nbb and 0nbb are quite distinct,
however
6Why is 0nbb so hard to find?
7Detecting Events - Super-NEMO
- Super-NEMO will look for 0nbb decays
- bb source foil surrounded by tracking volume and
Calorimeter (PMTs and Scintillators)
Light output (Nph)/ Ee Nph x Q.E. Npe
8DE/E, the Energy Resolution
- The energy resolution is related to the spread of
the energy spectrum.
- Npe follows a poisson distribution, so
- Current DE/E 14 at 1 MeV.
- Aiming for 7 at 1 MeV, need an improvement in
Npe by a factor of 4.
9PMTs Scintillators
- Must match Q.E. to wavelength of maximum
emission. - To do so, need to accurately know the emission
spectra of the scintillators. - Using a miniature spectrometer, can achieve this.
- First, does the spectrometer work?
- Can Laser or X-rays be used to approximate b
decays? - What are the W.O.M.E. for the scintillators?
10Spectrometer range 340-1000nm?
470nm
475nm
- Spectra of LEDs taken to test sensitivity around
the 400-500nm region (region of scintillators) - Consistent results give confidence in the
sensitivity of spectrometer at these wavelengths. - Now can take spectra of Scintillators
403.5nm
11Spectrometer Setup
- Laser hits scintillator, produces light
- Light travels along fibre to spectrometer
- Data from spectrometer is stored on Laptop
- Data analysed using ROOT
- Four different scintillator samples studied -
Bicron because of high light output. - gt80 spectra were taken for laser results alone,
with various orientations of laser and
scintillator.
12Laser Spectra
Each has 5 unscaled spectra, they are so similar
that any onecan be used for analysis. Background
light is negligible.
13Laser vs. X-ray spectra
- Repeated with X-rays for all but BC-408.
- Little difference between the spectra produced.
- Decided that Laser can be used to simulate
ionizing radiation. - Can therefore take wavelengths of maximum
emission from Laser plots.
14Final Emission Spectra
15Finding DE/E
- 207Bi is used to produce b particles, as it has 2
conversion electrons at 494 and 967 keV. - 207Bi is a b AND g source.
- b can be stopped easily, so b g and g are
taken.
- The two spectra are normalised about the region
of g only. Subtracting the spectra should now
give the b energy spectrum.
- A fit accounting for the K, L and M energies
gives us sK and EK.
16Finding DE/E
17Finding DE/E
18Results
Scintillator l of max emission (nm) l of max emission (nm) DE/E () (with Hamamatsu R6233MOD PMT)
Scintillator Bicron Measured DE/E () (with Hamamatsu R6233MOD PMT)
BC-404 408 414-420 7.8
BC-408 425 426-468 8.2
BC-412 434 432-436 (424-8 also noted) 10.4
Karkhov - 418-425 -
19Comparison with Previous Results
Scintillator Coating DE/E,
BC-404 None 9.4
BC-404 Mylar 7.8
BC-404 Tyvec 8.2
BC-404 Mylar/Tyvec 7.4
BC-408 None 9.7
BC-408 Mylar 8.2
BC-408 Tyvec 8.5
BC-408 Mylar/Tyvec 7.7
- Previous investigations have seen better DE/E
with other coverings. - Have only investigated Mylar covering, variations
may further improve DE/E.
20Results
- Target DE/E of 7 at 1 MeV seems within reach.
- The R6233 used has Q.E.max of 34.9 at 350 nm.
- Multiplying normalised spectra by Q.E. and Light
Outputs can give interesting plots. - The integral of this plot is proportional to Npe.
21Using the Integrals
DE/E / (Npe)-1/2 I Ng Q.E. Npe DE/E
(Npe)1/2 constant
Should find I404 ' I408 because DE/E404 '
DE/E408 I404 gt I412 because DE/E404 lt DE/E412
Using measured Karkhov spectra, can find light
output (55 Anthracene) and use this to scale
the spectrum before multiplying by Q.E. Can get a
(very) rough idea of DE/Ekarkhov using mean of
constants.
22Using the Integrals
Scintillator Light Output ( Anthracene) DE/E () Integral (I / Npe) DE/E (I)1/2
BC-404 68 7.8 17.183 32.33
BC-408 64 8.2 17.283 34.09
BC-412 60 10.4 12.819 37.24
Karkhov from spectra 55 9.1 14.261 mean 34.55
23Comparing integrals ( ?)
- 8.5, 13.2, 5.2 differences, acceptable for
rough estimate of DE/E - DE/Ekarkhov' 9.250.65
24Summary
- Aiming for 7 DE/E at 1 MeV.
- Have achieved 7.8 at 967 keV.
- This can be improved with change of scintillator
covering and possibly through use of a
Green-extended PMT. - Have a convenient quick way to verify emission
spectra of scintillators. - Can estimate DE/E with reasonable precision from
emission Q.E. spectra, which can be used to
pre-judge suitability of scintillators before
testing and also to check results.