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Accurate Simulations of 206Pb Recoils in SuperCDMS

SuperCDMS is a direct detection search for WIMPs, currently operating a 9 kg array of germanium detectors in the Soudan Underground Laboratory. The detectors, known as iZIPs, are cylindrical in shape and each flat surface is instrumented with both ionization and phonon sensors. Charge and phonon inf...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of low temperature physics 2014, Vol.176 (5-6), p.937-942
Main Author: Redl, P.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Online Access:Get full text
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Summary:SuperCDMS is a direct detection search for WIMPs, currently operating a 9 kg array of germanium detectors in the Soudan Underground Laboratory. The detectors, known as iZIPs, are cylindrical in shape and each flat surface is instrumented with both ionization and phonon sensors. Charge and phonon information is collected for each event, and comparing the energy collected in the phonon sensors to the charge sensors gives excellent discrimination power between nuclear recoil and electron recoil events. Furthermore, this technology provides excellent discrimination between surface and bulk events. In order to show the surface event rejection capability of these detectors, two 210 Pb sources were installed facing two of the detectors currently operating in the Soudan experimental run. The 210 Pb decays to 210 Bi, which in turn decays to 210 Po. The 210 Po decays by alpha emission, yielding a recoiling 206 Pb ion with 103 keV kinetic energy and an alpha particle with 5.4 MeV kinetic energy. We used the non-standard Screened Nuclear Recoil Physics List (Mendenhall and Weller, Nucl. Instrum. Methods Phys. Res. B 227:420–430, 2005 ) in Geant4 (Agostinelli et al., Nucl. Instrum. Methods Phys. Res. Sect. A 506:250–303, 2003 ) to simulate all of the above decays and achieve excellent agreement with experiment. The focus of this paper is the simulation of the 210 Po decay.
ISSN:0022-2291
1573-7357
DOI:10.1007/s10909-014-1102-z