The addition of O 2 to gas mixtures in time projection chambers containing CS 2 has recently been shown to produce multiple negative ions that travel at slightly different velocities. This allows a measurement of the absolute position of ionising events in the z (drift) direction. In this work, we apply the z-fiducialisation technique to a directional dark matter search. We present results from a 46.3 live-day source-free exposure of the DRIFT-IId detector run in this new mode. With full-volume fiducialisation, we have achieved the first background-free operation of a directional detector. The resulting exclusion curve for spindependent WIMP-proton interactions reaches 1.1 pb at 100 GeV/c 2 , a factor of 2 better than our previous work. We describe the automated analysis used here, and argue that detector upgrades, implemented after the acquisition of these data, will bring an additional factor of 3 improvement in the near future.arXiv:1410.7821v3 [hep-ex] 23 Jul 2015 DRIFT-IId detector and science runsThe DRIFT experiment is sited at a depth of 1.1 km in the STFC Boulby Underground Science Facility [29], which provides 2805 m.w.e. shielding against cosmic rays. The TPC is housed inside a stainless steel cubic vacuum vessel, surrounded on all sides with 44 g cm −2 of polypropylene pellets to shield against neutrons from the cavern walls. The vessel was filled with a mixture of 30:10:1 Torr CS 2 :CF 4 :O 2 gas, and sealed for the duration of each run. This departure from the normal mode of operation, in which gas is flowed at a constant rate of one complete vacuum vessel change (590 g) /d, was necessary due to safety concerns over sources of ignition in the constant flow system. These concerns have since been addressed with modifications to the gas system.The DRIFT-IId NITPC consists of a thin-film (0.9 µm aluminised Mylar), texturised central cathode [25] at a potential of -31.9 kV faced on either side by two 1 m 2 multi-wire proportional chambers (hereafter, the 'left' and 'right' MWPCs) at a distance of 50 cm. In this way, two 50-cm-long drift regions are defined. A field cage of 31 stainless steel rings on either side steps down the voltage smoothly between the central cathode and the MWPCs to ensure a uniform electric field of 580 V cm −1 throughout the drift regions. The MWPCs are made up of a central grounded anode plane of 20 µm diameter stainless steel wires with 2 mm pitch, sandwiched between two perpendicular grid planes of 100 µm wires at -2884 V, again with 2 mm pitch and separated by 1 cm from the anode plane. A full description of the detector can be found in Ref. [30].Both the inner grid and anode planes have every eighth wire joined together and read out as one, such that a single 'octave' of wires reads out 8 × 2 = 16 mm in x and y: large enough to contain the recoil events of interest. The outermost 52 (41) wires of the 512 total on the inner grid (anode) planes are grouped together into x (y) veto regions, reducing the fiducial volume of the detector to 0.80 m 3 . The anode and grid veto signal...
Data are presented from the DRIFT-IId detector operated in the Boulby Underground Science Facility in England. A 0.8 m 3 fiducial volume, containing partial pressures of 30 Torr CS 2 and 10 Torr CF 4 , was exposed for a duration of 47.4 live-time days with sufficient passive shielding to provide a neutron free environment within the detector. The nuclear recoil events seen are consistent with a remaining low-level background from the decay of radon daughters attached to the central cathode of the detector. However, charge from such events must drift across the entire width of the detector, and thus display large diffusion upon reaching the readout planes of 2 the device. Exploiting this feature, it is shown to be possible to reject energy depositions from these radon progeny recoil events while still retaining sensitivity to fiducial-volume nuclear recoil events. The response of the detector is then interpreted, using the F nuclei content of the gas, in terms of sensitivity to proton spin-dependent WIMP-nucleon interactions, displaying a minimum in sensitivity cross section at 1.8 pb for a WIMP mass of 100 GeV/c 2 . This sensitivity was achieved without compromising the direction sensitivity of DRIFT.
Radon gas emanating from materials is of interest in environmental science and also a major concern in rare event non-accelerator particle physics experiments such as dark matter and double beta decay searches, where it is a major source of background. Notable for dark matter experiments is the production of radon progeny recoils (RPRs), the low energy (∼ 100 keV) recoils of radon daughter isotopes, which can mimic the signal expected from WIMP interactions. Presented here are results of measurements of radon emanation from detector materials in the 1m 3 DRIFT-II directional dark matter gas time projection chamber experiment. Construction and operation of a radon emanation facility for this work is described, along with an analysis to continuously monitor DRIFT data for the presence of internal 222 Rn and 218 Po. Applying this analysis to historical DRIFT data, we show how systematic substitution of detector materials for alternatives, selected by this device for low radon emanation, has resulted in a factor of ∼ 10 reduction in internal radon rates. Levels are found to be consistent with the sum from separate radon emanation measurements of the internal materials and also with direct measurement using an attached alpha spectrometer. The current DRIFT detector, DRIFT-IId, is found to have sensitivity to 222 Rn of 2.5 µBq l −1 with current analysis efficiency, potentially opening up DRIFT technology as a new tool for sensitive radon assay of materials.
Abstract. The current status of the DRIFT (Directional Recoil Identification From Tracks) experiment at Boulby Mine is presented, including the latest limits on the WIMP spin-dependent cross-section from 1.5 kg days of running with a mixture of CS2 and CF4. Planned upgrades to DRIFT IId are detailed, along with ongoing work towards DRIFT III, which aims to be the world's first 10 m 3 -scale directional Dark Matter detector.
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