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Application of metallic magnetic calorimeter in rare event search

  • I. Kim
  • , H. S. Jo
  • , C. S. Kang
  • , G. B. Kim
  • , H. L. Kim
  • , S. R. Kim
  • , Y. H. Kim
  • , H. J. Lee
  • , J. H. Lee
  • , M. K. Lee
  • , S. Y. Oh
  • , J. H. So
  • Institute for Basic Science
  • Korea Research Institute of Standards and Science
  • Seoul National University
  • Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
  • Korea Institute of SandT Evaluation and Planning (KISTEP)
  • South Dakota School of Mines & Technology

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

40 Scopus citations

Abstract

Metallic magnetic calorimeters (MMCs) are highly sensitive temperature sensors that use the paramagnetic nature of erbium in a metallic host and superconducting electronics usually composed of a superconducting niobium coil and a current sensing superconducting quantum interference device. This article discusses the applicability of MMCs in experimental searches for rare events in particle physics. A detector module using two MMCs was built to perform low-temperature measurements of heat and scintillation light generated by particle interaction in a 340 g 40Ca100MoO4 crystal. The energy transfer mechanism, from incident particles to the components of the heat and light sensors, is described through a thermal model. MMCs, with gold films collecting athermal phonons, can be used over wide ranges of operating temperature and crystal volume without a significant change in detector performances. Rare event searches could thus benefit from MMC-based detectors presenting such flexibility as well as excellent energy resolution and particle discrimination power.

Original languageEnglish
Article number094005
JournalSuperconductor Science and Technology
Volume30
Issue number9
DOIs
StatePublished - 10 Aug 2017

Keywords

  • low-temperature detector
  • metallic magnetic calorimeter
  • scintillating crystal
  • SQUID

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