Virtual depth by active background suppression: revisiting the cosmic muon induced background of Gerda Phase II

Abstract In-situ production of radioisotopes by cosmic muon interactions may generate a non-negligible background for deep underground rare event searches. Previous Monte Carlo studies for the Gerda experiment at Lngs identified the delayed decays of $$^{77}$$ 77 Ge and its metastable state $$^{77m}...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Christoph Wiesinger, Luciano Pandola, Stefan Schönert
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2018-07-01
Series:European Physical Journal C: Particles and Fields
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1140/epjc/s10052-018-6079-3
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Summary:Abstract In-situ production of radioisotopes by cosmic muon interactions may generate a non-negligible background for deep underground rare event searches. Previous Monte Carlo studies for the Gerda experiment at Lngs identified the delayed decays of $$^{77}$$ 77 Ge and its metastable state $$^{77m}$$ 77m Ge as dominant cosmogenic background in the search for neutrinoless double beta decay of $$^{76}$$ 76 Ge. This might limit the sensitivity of next generation experiments aiming for increased $$^{76}$$ 76 Ge mass at background-free conditions and thereby define a minimum depth requirement. A re-evaluation of the $$^{77(m)}$$ 77(m) Ge background for the Gerda experiment has been carried out by a set of Monte Carlo simulations. The obtained $$^{77(m)}$$ 77(m) Ge production rate is ($$0.21\pm 0.01$$ 0.21±0.01 ) nuclei/(kg$$\cdot $$ · year). After application of state-of-the-art active background suppression techniques and simple delayed coincidence cuts this corresponds to a background contribution of $$(2.7\pm 0.3)\times 10^{-6}$$ (2.7±0.3)×10-6 cts/(keV$$\cdot $$ · kg$$\cdot $$ · year). The suppression achieved by this strategy equals an effective muon flux reduction of more than one order of magnitude. This virtual depth increase opens the way for next generation rare event searches.
ISSN:1434-6044
1434-6052