English

Reducing DRIFT Backgrounds with a Submicron Aluminized-Mylar Cathode

Instrumentation and Detectors 2015-12-09 v2

Abstract

Background events in the DRIFT-IId dark matter detector, mimicking potential WIMP signals, are predominantly caused by alpha decays on the central cathode in which the alpha particle is completely or partially absorbed by the cathode material. We installed a 0.9 micron thick aluminized-mylar cathode as a way to reduce the probability of producing these backgrounds. We study three generations of cathode (wire, thin-film, and radiologically clean thin-film) with a focus on the ratio of background events to alpha decays. Two independent methods of measuring the absolute alpha decay rate are used to ensure an accurate result, and agree to within 10%10\%. Using alpha range spectroscopy, we measure the radiologically cleanest cathode version to have a contamination of 3.3±0.13.3\pm0.1 ppt 234^{234}U and 73±273\pm2 ppb 238^{238}U. This cathode reduces the probability of producing an RPR from an alpha decay by a factor of 70±2070\pm20 compared to the original stainless steel wire cathode. First results are presented from a texturized version of the cathode, intended to be even more transparent to alpha particles. These efforts, along with other background reduction measures, have resulted in a drop in the observed background rate from 500/day to 1/day. With the recent implementation of full-volume fiducialization, these remaining background events are identified, allowing for background-free operation.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1502.03535,
  title  = {Reducing DRIFT Backgrounds with a Submicron Aluminized-Mylar Cathode},
  author = {James B. R. Battat and Ed Daw and Alexei Dorofeev and Anthony C. Ezeribe and Jennifer R. Fox and Jean-Luc Gauvreau and Michael Gold and Lydia Harmon and John Harton and Randy Lafler and Robert J. Lauer and Eric R. Lee and Dinesh Loomba and Alexander Lumnah and John Matthews and Eric H. Miller and Frederic Mouton and Alexander St. J. Murphy and Nguyen Phan and Stephen W. Sadler and Andrew Scarff and Fred Schuckman and Daniel Snowden-Ifft and Neil J. C. Spooner and Daniel Walker},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1502.03535},
  year   = {2015}
}

Comments

38 pages, 26 figures. Submitted to Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Research Section A

R2 v1 2026-06-22T08:28:09.397Z