Expected Backgrounds of the BetaCage, an Ultra-sensitive Screener for Surface Contamination

ORAL

Abstract

Material screening for low-energy betas and alphas is necessary for rare-event-search experiments, such as dark matter and neutrinoless double-beta decay searches where surface radiocontamination has become a significant background. The BetaCage, a gaseous neon time-projection chamber, has been proposed as a screener for emitters of low-energy betas and alphas to which existing screening facilities are insufficiently sensitive. The expected sensitivity is 0.1 betas / (keV m$^2$ day) and 0.1 alphas / (m$^2$ day). Expected backgrounds are dominated by Compton scattering of external photons in the sample to be screened; radioassays and simulations indicate backgrounds from detector materials and radon daughters should be subdominant. We will report on details of the background simulations and the detector design that allows discrimination to reach these sensitivity levels.

Authors

  • B. Wang

    Syracuse University

  • R. Bunker

    Syracuse University

  • R.W. Schnee

    Syracuse University

  • Michael Bowles

    Syracuse University

  • Marek Kos

    Syracuse University

  • Zeeshan Ahmed

    Caltech

  • S. Golwala

    Caltech, California Institute of Technology

  • R. Nelson

    Caltech, California Institute of Technology

  • D.R. Grant

    Alberta University, University of Alberta