2018
DOI: 10.1103/physrevd.97.112005
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Measurement of the liquid argon energy response to nuclear and electronic recoils

Abstract: A liquid argon time projection chamber, constructed for the Argon Response to Ionization and Scintillation (ARIS) experiment, has been exposed to the highly collimated and quasi-monoenergetic LICORNE neutron beam at the Institute de Physique Nuclaire Orsay in order to study the scintillation response to nuclear and electronic recoils. An array of liquid scintillator detectors, arranged around the apparatus, tag scattered neutrons and select nuclear recoil energies in the [7, 120] keV energy range. The relative… Show more

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Cited by 60 publications
(89 citation statements)
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References 23 publications
(49 reference statements)
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“…The difference of quenching factor is because of the recombination probability decreases with the increase of the particle energy in the range of 40keV to 511keV, which is consistent with Ref. [30].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 91%
“…The difference of quenching factor is because of the recombination probability decreases with the increase of the particle energy in the range of 40keV to 511keV, which is consistent with Ref. [30].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 91%
“…It is well known that the S1 and S2 light yields depend on the strength of electric field, imposed in drift interaction region, mainly due to recombination effect of ionizing electrons. Such properties are well measured by previous experiments, such as SCENE [6] (0-0.97 kV/cm, 10.3-57.3 keV nr , nr : nuclear recoil) and ARIS [7] (0-0.5 kV/cm, 7.1-117.8 keV nr ) where drift-fields are lower than 1 kV/cm and the ER/NR discrimination power of S2/S1 is not explicitly described. In this paper, we focus on the drift-field dependence of S2/S1 properties up to 3.0 kV/cm.…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 68%
“…For other parameter settings, we compare case 2 (δ = 0.61) and case 3 (α = 0.21 [16]) as a source of systematic uncertainty for the ER/NR discrimination power estimation described in the next section. 18.5 ± 9.7 Table 1: Three cases of δ and α parameter setting and fitting results of γ extracted by SCENE data with a comparison to the ARIS result [7].…”
Section: E-fieldmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Argon has been widely used for both dark matter WIMP searches [25,26] and for neutrino detection [27] and has therefore been well characterized above 20 keV in the literature. It has a high light yield, 40 photons=keVee [28] (electron equivalent energy deposition), providing a sufficiently low threshold for CEvNS detection, and the quenched response to nuclear recoils has been well-characterized [29][30][31][32] allowing for well-understood CEvNS predictions. LAr scintillates on two significantly different timescales (τ singlet ≈6ns;τ triplet ≈ 1600 ns) [33] providing powerful pulse-shape discrimination (PSD) capabilities to separate nuclear from electronic recoils (NR and ER respectively) [34][35][36].…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%