The XENON1T experiment: Monte Carlo background estimation and sensitivity curves study

Despite the scientific achievement of the last decades in the astrophysical and cosmological fields, the majority of the Universe energy content is still unknown. A potential solution to the “missing mass problem” is the existence of dark matter in the form of WIMPs. Due to the very small cross sect...

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Main Author: Massoli, Fabio Valerio <1987>
Other Authors: Sartorelli, Gabriella
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:en
Published: Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://amsdottorato.unibo.it/6776/
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spelling ndltd-unibo.it-oai-amsdottorato.cib.unibo.it-67762015-04-16T04:54:17Z The XENON1T experiment: Monte Carlo background estimation and sensitivity curves study Massoli, Fabio Valerio <1987> FIS/01 Fisica sperimentale Despite the scientific achievement of the last decades in the astrophysical and cosmological fields, the majority of the Universe energy content is still unknown. A potential solution to the “missing mass problem” is the existence of dark matter in the form of WIMPs. Due to the very small cross section for WIMP-nuleon interactions, the number of expected events is very limited (about 1 ev/tonne/year), thus requiring detectors with large target mass and low background level. The aim of the XENON1T experiment, the first tonne-scale LXe based detector, is to be sensitive to WIMP-nucleon cross section as low as 10^-47 cm^2. To investigate the possibility of such a detector to reach its goal, Monte Carlo simulations are mandatory to estimate the background. To this aim, the GEANT4 toolkit has been used to implement the detector geometry and to simulate the decays from the various background sources: electromagnetic and nuclear. From the analysis of the simulations, the level of background has been found totally acceptable for the experiment purposes: about 1 background event in a 2 tonne-years exposure. Indeed, using the Maximum Gap method, the XENON1T sensitivity has been evaluated and the minimum for the WIMP-nucleon cross sections has been found at 1.87 x 10^-47 cm^2, at 90% CL, for a WIMP mass of 45 GeV/c^2. The results have been independently cross checked by using the Likelihood Ratio method that confirmed such results with an agreement within less than a factor two. Such a result is completely acceptable considering the intrinsic differences between the two statistical methods. Thus, in the PhD thesis it has been proven that the XENON1T detector will be able to reach the designed sensitivity, thus lowering the limits on the WIMP-nucleon cross section by about 2 orders of magnitude with respect to the current experiments. Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna Sartorelli, Gabriella 2015-02-26 Doctoral Thesis PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://amsdottorato.unibo.it/6776/ info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language en
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic FIS/01 Fisica sperimentale
spellingShingle FIS/01 Fisica sperimentale
Massoli, Fabio Valerio <1987>
The XENON1T experiment: Monte Carlo background estimation and sensitivity curves study
description Despite the scientific achievement of the last decades in the astrophysical and cosmological fields, the majority of the Universe energy content is still unknown. A potential solution to the “missing mass problem” is the existence of dark matter in the form of WIMPs. Due to the very small cross section for WIMP-nuleon interactions, the number of expected events is very limited (about 1 ev/tonne/year), thus requiring detectors with large target mass and low background level. The aim of the XENON1T experiment, the first tonne-scale LXe based detector, is to be sensitive to WIMP-nucleon cross section as low as 10^-47 cm^2. To investigate the possibility of such a detector to reach its goal, Monte Carlo simulations are mandatory to estimate the background. To this aim, the GEANT4 toolkit has been used to implement the detector geometry and to simulate the decays from the various background sources: electromagnetic and nuclear. From the analysis of the simulations, the level of background has been found totally acceptable for the experiment purposes: about 1 background event in a 2 tonne-years exposure. Indeed, using the Maximum Gap method, the XENON1T sensitivity has been evaluated and the minimum for the WIMP-nucleon cross sections has been found at 1.87 x 10^-47 cm^2, at 90% CL, for a WIMP mass of 45 GeV/c^2. The results have been independently cross checked by using the Likelihood Ratio method that confirmed such results with an agreement within less than a factor two. Such a result is completely acceptable considering the intrinsic differences between the two statistical methods. Thus, in the PhD thesis it has been proven that the XENON1T detector will be able to reach the designed sensitivity, thus lowering the limits on the WIMP-nucleon cross section by about 2 orders of magnitude with respect to the current experiments.
author2 Sartorelli, Gabriella
author_facet Sartorelli, Gabriella
Massoli, Fabio Valerio <1987>
author Massoli, Fabio Valerio <1987>
author_sort Massoli, Fabio Valerio <1987>
title The XENON1T experiment: Monte Carlo background estimation and sensitivity curves study
title_short The XENON1T experiment: Monte Carlo background estimation and sensitivity curves study
title_full The XENON1T experiment: Monte Carlo background estimation and sensitivity curves study
title_fullStr The XENON1T experiment: Monte Carlo background estimation and sensitivity curves study
title_full_unstemmed The XENON1T experiment: Monte Carlo background estimation and sensitivity curves study
title_sort xenon1t experiment: monte carlo background estimation and sensitivity curves study
publisher Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna
publishDate 2015
url http://amsdottorato.unibo.it/6776/
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