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DEAP-3600 Dark Matter Search

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 نشر من قبل Marcin Ku\\'zniak Dr.
 تاريخ النشر 2014
  مجال البحث فيزياء
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The DEAP-3600 experiment is located 2 km underground at SNOLAB, in Sudbury, Ontario. It is a single-phase detector that searches for dark matter particle interactions within a 1000-kg fiducial mass target of liquid argon. A first generation prototype detector (DEAP-1) with a 7-kg liquid argon target mass demonstrated a high level of pulse-shape discrimination (PSD) for reducing $beta$/$gamma$ backgrounds and helped to develop low radioactivity techniques to mitigate surface-related $alpha$ backgrounds. Construction of the DEAP-3600 detector is nearly complete and commissioning is starting in 2014. The target sensitivity to spin-independent scattering of Weakly Interacting Massive Particles (WIMPs) on nucleons of 10$^{-46}$ cm$^2$ will allow one order of magnitude improvement in sensitivity over current searches at 100 GeV WIMP mass. This paper presents an overview and status of the DEAP-3600 project and discusses plans for a future multi-tonne experiment, DEAP-50T.



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203 - M.G. Boulay 2012
The DEAP-3600 detector, currently under construction at SNOLAB, has been designed to achieve extremely low background rates from all sources, including 39Ar beta decays, neutron scatters (from internal and external sources), surface alpha contaminati on and radon. An overview of the detector and its sensitivity are presented.
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The first-year results from DEAP-3600, a single-phase liquid argon direct-detection dark matter experiment, were recently reported. At first sight, they seem to provide no new constraints, as the limit lies well within the region already excluded by three different xenon experiments: LUX, PandaX-II, and XENON1T. We point out, however, that this conclusion is not necessarily true, for it is based on the untested assumption that the dark matter particle couples equally to protons and neutrons. For the more general case of isosping-violating dark matter, we find that there are regions in the parameter space where DEAP-3600 actually provides the most stringent limits on the dark matter-proton spin-independent cross section. Such regions correspond to the so-called Xenonphobic dark matter scenario, for which the neutron-to-proton coupling ratio is close to $-0.7$. Our results seem to signal the beginning of a new era in which the complementarity among different direct detection targets will play a crucial role in the determination of the fundamental properties of the dark matter particle.
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