LUX-Zeplin (LZ) experiment | |
Settlement Type: | experiment |
Subdivision Type: | Country |
Subdivision Name: | United States |
Subdivision Type1: | State |
Population Density Km2: | auto |
Website: | The LZ Dark Matter Experiment |
The LUX-ZEPLIN (LZ) Experiment is a next-generation dark matter direct detection experiment hoping to observe weakly interacting massive particles (WIMP) scatters on nuclei.[1] It was formed in 2012 by combining the LUX and ZEPLIN groups. It is currently a collaboration of 30 institutes in the US, UK, Portugal and South Korea. The experiment is located at the Sanford Underground Research Facility (SURF) in South Dakota,[2] and is managed by the United States Department of Energy's (DOE) Lawrence Berkeley National Lab (Berkeley Lab).
The experiment uses an ultra-sensitive detector made of 7 tonnes of liquid xenon to hunt for signals of WIMP-nucleus interactions. It is one of three such experiments which lead the search for direct detection of WIMPs above 10 GeV/c2, the other two being the XENONnT experiment and the PANDAX-4T experiment.
In the spring of 2015, LZ passed the "Critical Decision Step 1" or CD-1 review, and became an official DOE project.[3] U.S. Department of Energy officials on Sept. 21, 2020 formally signed off on project completion for LZ; DOE's project completion milestone is called Critical Decision 4, or CD-4.[4]
To conclusively identify WIMP-nucleus scatters, LZ must be able to observe very small energy depositions in its active volume. However, it must also be able to differentiate true WIMP scatters from other interactions caused by known particles. Examples of these known "backgrounds" are interactions from gamma rays produced by trace radioactivity in the environment, interactions from neutrons produced in the environment, and interactions from cosmic ray muons produced in the upper atmosphere. The two goals of a dark matter search are to minimize the number of these background interactions, and for those that do occur, to be able to identify that they are from background (as opposed to WIMPs).
First, the innermost detector is composed of a dual-phase xenon time projection chamber (TPC).[5] [6] This detector is the target for WIMP-nucleus scatters. As discussed in the next section, this detector can perform a 3-D reconstruction of the position of an interaction in the xenon. This enables an identification and rejection of background interactions that happen near the periphery (sides, top, and bottom) of the detector. These peripheral interactions are overwhelmingly likely to be from external gamma rays or neutrons and radioactive decays of trace radionuclides in the detector components composing the TPC and cryostats. Moreover, the relatively large density of liquid xenon allows the TPC to "self-shield" to a degree: gamma rays (neutrons) entering the TPC can travel only approximately a few centimeters (10 centimeters) before scattering and being stopped. As a result, the innermost volume of the detector is largely free of many of these backgrounds. Because it is so quiet, this innermost, or "fiducial" volume is very sensitive to observing WIMP scatters above other backgrounds, and is the space in which LZ's WIMP searches are conducted.
Next, the TPC is located inside several layers of active and passive shielding to reduce rates of external gamma rays and neutrons. The TPC is housed in an inner cryostat, which maintains the temperatures needed to keep the xenon in the liquid phase (approximately 178K). This inner cryostat is nested in a larger, outer cryostat, which helps limit heat transfer into the xenon. External to the outer cryostat is a set of acrylic tanks holding liquid scintillator. This scintillator is liquid-alkyl-benzene (LAB) loaded with gadolinium for more efficient neutron capture. If a gamma ray or neutron scatters once inside the TPC but then exits, it will likely also deposit energy in the scintillator. These energy deposits are accompanied by emission of optical photons, which can be detected by an array of photomultiplier tubes (PMTs) located outside of the acrylic tanks. By observing such a signal in coincidence with a scatter in the TPC, it becomes possible to reject backgrounds in the TPC that might otherwise look like WIMP scatters. This is particularly important for neutrons, which can penetrate farther than gamma rays and which scatter on the xenon nucleus in the same way that WIMPs are expected to (instead of on xenon's atomic electrons). The outer-detector PMT array is located in a larger water tank. Together, the water tank and liquid scintillator also provide significant passive shielding against external gamma rays and neutrons, stopping a vast majority of them before they have the chance to enter the TPC. The whole assembly is located approximately one mile underground, in the Davis Cavern at SURF. This underground location creates a rock overburden that significantly reduces the rate of cosmic ray muons entering the TPC relative to the rate at Earth's surface. All together these different strategies ensure that LZ is a detector capable of performing a very sensitive search for dark matter scatters on xenon nuclei.
The detector at the heart of LZ is a cylindrical dual-phase xenon time projection chamber (TPC).[7] This is composed of a 7 tonne liquid xenon target and a small region of gaseous xenon above. The operational principle is as follows. When a WIMP or background scatter occurs, a small amount of kinetic energy is given to a xenon nucleus (or atomic electron). This causes the xenon atom to ricochet around the area near the site of the scatter, converting its energy into the production of prompt scintillation photons, freed (ionization) electrons, and heat. A number of the prompt scintillation photons can be detected by the photomultiplier tubes (PMTs) at the top and bottom of the detector. The ionization electrons drift upward in an externally applied electric field, and upon reaching the liquid surface, are pulled into the gas and create electroluminescence light in a stronger electric field. This electroluminescence creates a delayed "S2" signal. The externally-created electric fields are created by a set of four high voltage electrode grids: the bottom, the cathode, the gate, and the anode.[8]
Taken together, the S1 and S2 enable precise 3D reconstruction of the position of an interaction in the xenon. Because the S2 happens very close to the upper PMT array, it alone can give a good sense of where in XY (i.e. relative to the detector axis) the interaction has occurred. The time difference between the prompt S1 and delayed S2 is a proxy for the depth of the interaction: by using the drift velocity of electrons in xenon at a given electric field, one can convert the drift time to a physical depth, or Z position. Together, this XYZ position permits one to identify a quiet inner fiducial volume for sensitive WIMP searches. It also enables discrimination between WIMP-like single-site interactions and background-like multi-site interactions, like those from neutrons or gamma rays.
Note that unlike other kinds of time projection chambers, such as those used in neutrino experiments like MicroBooNE, the ionization signal here is fully captured via the S2 light - no current is directly measured by electrodes.
In July 2022, the LZ collaboration published in a preprint its first upper limit on the spin-independent WIMP-nucleon scattering cross section, using approximately 60 livedays worth of data.[9] [10] Future searches intend to further probe for WIMP scatters, with a nominal search period of 1000 days.
On 28 July 2023, the LZ experiment's first results of its searches for WIMPs, previously released as a preprint, were published in Physical Review Letters,[11] excluding cross sections above
9.2 x 10-48cm2
2.58 x 10-47cm2