First demonstration of a TES based cryogenic Li2MoO4detector for neutrinoless double beta decay search
Abstract
Cryogenic calorimetric experiments to search for neutrinoless double-beta decay (0ββ) are highly competitive, scalable and versatile in isotope. The largest planned detector array, CUPID, is comprised of about 1500 individual Li2100MoO4 detector modules with a further scale up envisioned for a follow up experiment (CUPID-1T). In this article, we present a novel detector concept targeting this second stage with a low impedance TES based readout for the Li2MoO4 absorber that is easily mass-produced and lends itself to a multiplexed readout. We present the detector design and results from a first prototype detector operated at the NEXUS shallow underground facility at Fermilab. The detector is a 2-cm-side cube with 21\,g mass that is strongly thermally coupled to its readout chip to allow rise-times of 0.5\,ms. This design is more than one order of magnitude faster than present NTD based detectors and is hence expected to effectively mitigate backgrounds generated through the pile-up of two independent two neutrino decay events coinciding close in time. Together with a baseline resolution of 1.95\,keV (FWHM) these performance parameters extrapolate to a background index from pile-up as low as 5· 10-6\,counts/keV/kg/yr in CUPID size crystals. The detector was calibrated up to the MeV region showing sufficient dynamic range for 0ββ searches. In combination with a SuperCDMS HVeV detector this setup also allowed us to perform a precision measurement of the scintillation time constants of Li2MoO4. The crystal showed a significant fast scintillation emission with O(10\,μs) time-scale, more than an order below the detector response of presently considered light detectors suggesting the possibility of further progress in pile-up rejection through better light detectors in the future.
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