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15–18 Feb 2022
virtual
America/Vancouver timezone
WNPPC2022 Booklet has been added. See also information about today's special guest: Dr. Eden Hennessey

Status of the KDK Experiment: A Measurement of 40K Relevant for Rare-event Searches

18 Feb 2022, 13:24
12m
virtual

virtual

Nuclear and Particle Physics Particle Physics

Speaker

Lilianna Hariasz (Queen's University, Kingston, ON)

Description

Potassium-40 ($^{40}$K) is a naturally-occurring, radioactive isotope of interest to rare-event searches as a challenging background. In particular, NaI scintillators contain $^{40}$K contamination which produces an irreducible $\sim 3\text{ keV}$ signal originating from this isotope's electron capture (EC) decays. In geochronology, the $\mathcal{O}(\text{Gy})$ lifetime of $^{40}$K is utilized in dating techniques. The direct-to-ground-state EC intensity ($I_\text{EC}$) of this radionuclide has never been measured, and theoretical predictions are highly variable ($I_\text{EC} \sim (0.05(1)–0.22(4))\%$). The poorly understood intensity of this branch may affect the interpretation or precision of experimental results, including those probing DM signals in the (2-6) keV region. The KDK ("potassium decay") experiment is finalizing the first measurement of this $I_\text{EC}$ branch, which uses a coincidence technique between a high-resolution $\mathcal{O}(\text{keV})$ Silicon Drift Detector and a highly-efficient ($\sim 98\%$) $\mathcal{O}(\text{MeV})$ Modular Total Absorption Spectrometer (Oak Ridge National Labs) to differentiate ground and excited state EC decays of $^{40}$K. We report on the status of the main $^{40}$K analysis leading up to unblinding, along with a preliminary measurement of Zinc-65 decays used to test analysis methods.

email address 16lmh@queensu.ca
Please select: Experiment or Theory Experiment

Primary author

Lilianna Hariasz (Queen's University, Kingston, ON)

Co-authors

Dr N.T. Brewer (Oak Ridge National Laboratory Physics Division, Oak Ridge, TN) Mr H. Davis (Department of Nuclear Engineering, University of Tennesee, Knoxville, TN) Prof. P.C.F. Di Stefano (Queen's University, Kingston, ON) Prof. E.D. Lukosi (Department of Nuclear Engineering, University of Tennesee, Knoxville, TN) Dr B.C. Rasco (Oak Ridge National Laboratory Physics Division, Oak Ridge, TN) Dr K.P. Rykaczewski (Oak Ridge National Laboratory Physics Division, Oak Ridge, TN) Dr M. Stukel (Queen's University, Kingston, ON)

Presentation materials