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result(s) for
"Rivilla, I."
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Demonstration of event position reconstruction based on diffusion in the NEXT-white detector
by
Lebrun, P.
,
Teixeira, J. M. R.
,
Soto-Oton, J.
in
Artificial neural networks
,
Astronomy
,
Astrophysics and Cosmology
2024
Noble element time projection chambers are a leading technology for rare event detection in physics, such as for dark matter and neutrinoless double beta decay searches. Time projection chambers typically assign event position in the drift direction using the relative timing of prompt scintillation and delayed charge collection signals, allowing for reconstruction of an absolute position in the drift direction. In this paper, alternate methods for assigning event drift distance via quantification of electron diffusion in a pure high pressure xenon gas time projection chamber are explored. Data from the NEXT-White detector demonstrate the ability to achieve good position assignment accuracy for both high- and low-energy events. Using point-like energy deposits from
83
m
Kr calibration electron captures (
E
∼
45
keV), the position of origin of low-energy events is determined to 2 cm precision with bias
<
1
mm. A convolutional neural network approach is then used to quantify diffusion for longer tracks (
E
≥
1.5
MeV), from radiogenic electrons, yielding a precision of 3 cm on the event barycenter. The precision achieved with these methods indicates the feasibility energy calibrations of better than 1% FWHM at Q
β
β
in pure xenon, as well as the potential for event fiducialization in large future detectors using an alternate method that does not rely on primary scintillation.
Journal Article
Sensitivity of a tonne-scale NEXT detector for neutrinoless double-beta decay searches
by
Lebrun, P.
,
Teixeira, J. M. R.
,
Pérez, J.
in
Beta decay
,
Classical and Quantum Gravitation
,
Collaboration
2021
A
bstract
The
Neutrino Experiment with a Xenon TPC
(NEXT) searches for the neutrinoless double-beta (0
νββ
) decay of
136
Xe using high-pressure xenon gas TPCs with electroluminescent amplification. A scaled-up version of this technology with about 1 tonne of enriched xenon could reach in less than 5 years of operation a sensitivity to the half-life of 0
νββ
decay better than 10
27
years, improving the current limits by at least one order of magnitude. This prediction is based on a well-understood background model dominated by radiogenic sources. The detector concept presented here represents a first step on a compelling path towards sensitivity to the parameter space defined by the inverted ordering of neutrino masses, and beyond.
Journal Article
Demonstration of neutrinoless double beta decay searches in gaseous xenon with NEXT
by
Lebrun, P.
,
Teixeira, J. M. R.
,
Fahs, A.
in
Astronomy
,
Beta decay
,
Classical and Quantum Gravitation
2023
A
bstract
The NEXT experiment aims at the sensitive search of the neutrinoless double beta decay in
136
Xe, using high-pressure gas electroluminescent time projection chambers. The NEXT-White detector is the first radiopure demonstrator of this technology, operated in the Laboratorio Subterráneo de Canfranc. Achieving an energy resolution of 1% FWHM at 2.6 MeV and further background rejection by means of the topology of the reconstructed tracks, NEXT-White has been exploited beyond its original goals in order to perform a neu- trinoless double beta decay search. The analysis considers the combination of 271.6 days of
136
Xe-enriched data and 208.9 days of
136
Xe-depleted data. A detailed background modeling and measurement has been developed, ensuring the time stability of the radiogenic and cosmogenic contributions across both data samples. Limits to the neutrinoless mode are obtained in two alternative analyses: a background-model-dependent approach and a novel direct background-subtraction technique, offering results with small dependence on the background model assumptions. With a fiducial mass of only 3.50 ± 0.01 kg of
136
Xe-enriched xenon, 90% C.L. lower limits to the neutrinoless double beta decay are found in the
T
1
/
2
0
ν
> 5
.
5
×
10
23
−
1
.
3
×
10
24
yr range, depending on the method. The presented techniques stand as a proof-of-concept for the searches to be implemented with larger NEXT detectors.
Journal Article
Measurement of energy resolution with the NEXT-White silicon photomultipliers
by
Lebrun, P.
,
Teixeira, J. M. R.
,
Soto-Oton, J.
in
Beta decay
,
Classical and Quantum Gravitation
,
Dark Matter and Double Beta Decay (experiments)
2024
A
bstract
The NEXT-White detector, a high-pressure gaseous xenon time projection chamber, demonstrated the excellence of this technology for future neutrinoless double beta decay searches using photomultiplier tubes (PMTs) to measure energy and silicon photomultipliers (SiPMs) to extract topology information. This analysis uses
83
m
Kr data from the NEXT-White detector to measure and understand the energy resolution that can be obtained with the SiPMs, rather than with PMTs. The energy resolution obtained of (10.9 ± 0.6)%, full-width half-maximum, is slightly larger than predicted based on the photon statistics resulting from very low light detection coverage of the SiPM plane in the NEXT-White detector. The difference in the predicted and measured resolution is attributed to poor corrections, which are expected to be improved with larger statistics. Furthermore, the noise of the SiPMs is shown to not be a dominant factor in the energy resolution and may be negligible when noise subtraction is applied appropriately, for high-energy events or larger SiPM coverage detectors. These results, which are extrapolated to estimate the response of large coverage SiPM planes, are promising for the development of future, SiPM-only, readout planes that can offer imaging and achieve similar energy resolution to that previously demonstrated with PMTs.
Journal Article
Reconstructing neutrinoless double beta decay event kinematics in a xenon gas detector with vertex tagging
2025
A
bstract
If neutrinoless double beta decay is discovered, the next natural step would be understanding the lepton number violating physics responsible for it. Several alternatives exist beyond the exchange of light neutrinos. Some of these mechanisms can be distinguished by measuring phase-space observables, namely the opening angle cos
θ
among the two decay electrons, and the electron energy spectra,
T
1
and
T
2
. In this work, we study the statistical accuracy and precision in measuring these kinematic observables in a future xenon gas detector with the added capability to precisely locate the decay vertex. For realistic detector conditions (a gas pressure of 10 bar and spatial resolution of 4 mm), we find that the average
cos
θ
¯
and
T
1
¯
values can be reconstructed with a precision of 0.19 and 110 keV, respectively, assuming that only 10 neutrinoless double beta decay events are detected.
Journal Article
Reconstructing neutrinoless double beta decay event kinematics in a xenon gas detector with vertex tagging
by
Lebrun, P.
,
Teixeira, J. M. R.
,
Soto-Oton, J.
in
Dark Matter and Double Beta Decay (experiments)
,
Rare Decay
2025
If neutrinoless double beta decay is discovered, the next natural step would be understanding the lepton number violating physics responsible for it. Several alternatives exist beyond the exchange of light neutrinos. Some of these mechanisms can be distinguished by measuring phase-space observables, namely the opening angle cos θ among the two decay electrons, and the electron energy spectra, T1 and T2. In this work, we study the statistical accuracy and precision in measuring these kinematic observables in a future xenon gas detector with the added capability to precisely locate the decay vertex. For realistic detector conditions (a gas pressure of 10 bar and spatial resolution of 4 mm), we find that the average $\\overline{cos θ}$ and $\\overline{T_1}$ values can be reconstructed with a precision of 0.19 and 110 keV, respectively, assuming that only 10 neutrinoless double beta decay events are detected.
Journal Article
Fluorescence imaging of individual ions and molecules in pressurized noble gases for barium tagging in 136Xe
by
Foss, F. W.
,
McDonald, A. D.
,
Miller, R. L.
in
639/624/1075/1083
,
639/624/1107/328/2238
,
639/766/387/1126
2024
The imaging of individual Ba
2+
ions in high pressure xenon gas is one possible way to attain background-free sensitivity to neutrinoless double beta decay and hence establish the Majorana nature of the neutrino. In this paper we demonstrate selective single Ba
2+
ion imaging inside a high-pressure xenon gas environment. Ba
2+
ions chelated with molecular chemosensors are resolved at the gas-solid interface using a diffraction-limited imaging system with scan area of 1 × 1 cm
2
located inside 10 bar of xenon gas. This form of microscopy represents key ingredient in the development of barium tagging for neutrinoless double beta decay searches in
136
Xe. This also provides a new tool for studying the photophysics of fluorescent molecules and chemosensors at the solid-gas interface to enable bottom-up design of catalysts and sensors.
Barium tagging is a key ingredient for future detectors of neutrinoless double beta decay in low-background environments. Here, the authors demonstrate fluorescence imaging of single Ba2+ ions in high pressure Xenon gas, by comparing activity between Ba2+ chelated and unchelated samples of crown-ether chemosensors.
Journal Article
Performance of an optical TPC Geant4 simulation with opticks GPU-accelerated photon propagation
by
Lebrun, P.
,
Mano, R. D. P.
,
Simón, A.
in
Approximation
,
Astronomy
,
Astrophysics and Cosmology
2025
We investigate the performance of
Opticks
, a
NVIDIA OptiX API
7.5 GPU-accelerated photon propagation tool compared with a single-threaded
Geant4
simulation. We compare the simulations using an improved model of the
NEXT-CRAB-0
gaseous time projection chamber. Performance results suggest that
Opticks
improves simulation speeds by between
58.47
±
0.02
and
181.39
±
0.28
times relative to a CPU-only
Geant4
simulation and these results vary between different types of GPU and CPU. A detailed comparison shows that the number of detected photons, along with their times and wavelengths, are in good agreement between
Opticks
and
Geant4
.
Journal Article
Performance of an optical TPC Geant4 simulation with opticks GPU-accelerated photon propagation
by
Lebrun, P.
,
Teixeira, J. M. R.
,
Soto-Oton, J.
in
Applied Optics
,
Optical Communications
,
Optics and Photonics
2025
We investigate the performance of Opticks, a NVIDIA OptiX API 7.5 GPU-accelerated photon propagation tool compared with a single-threaded Geant4 simulation. We compare the simulations using an improved model of the NEXT-CRAB-0 gaseous time projection chamber. Performance results suggest that Opticks improves simulation speeds by between 58.47 ± 0.02 and 181.39 ± 0.28 times relative to a CPU-only Geant4 simulation and these results vary between different types of GPU and CPU. A detailed comparison shows that the number of detected photons, along with their times and wavelengths, are in good agreement between Opticks and Geant4.
Journal Article
Ba+2 ion trapping using organic submonolayer for ultra-low background neutrinoless double beta detector
2022
If neutrinos are their own antiparticles the otherwise-forbidden nuclear reaction known as neutrinoless double beta decay can occur. The very long lifetime expected for these exceptional events makes its detection a daunting task. In order to conduct an almost background-free experiment, the NEXT collaboration is investigating novel synthetic molecular sensors that may capture the Ba dication produced in the decay of certain Xe isotopes in a high-pressure gas experiment. The use of such molecular detectors immobilized on surfaces must be explored in the ultra-dry environment of a xenon gas chamber. Here, using a combination of highly sensitive surface science techniques in ultra-high vacuum, we demonstrate the possibility of employing the so-called Fluorescent Bicolor Indicator as the molecular component of the sensor. We unravel the ion capture process for these molecular indicators immobilized on a surface and explain the origin of the emission fluorescence shift associated to the ion trapping.
One of the possible events signaling a neutrinoless double beta decay is a Xe atom decaying into a Ba ion and two electrons. Aiming at the realisation of a detector for such a process, the authors show that Ba ions can be efficiently trapped (chelated) in vacuum by an organic molecule layer on a surface.
Journal Article