CYGNUS 2022 online meeting
from
Monday, January 10, 2022 (9:00 PM)
to
Wednesday, January 12, 2022 (12:10 AM)
Monday, January 10, 2022
9:00 PM
Introduction
-
Gregory Lane
(
Australian National University
)
Introduction
Gregory Lane
(
Australian National University
)
9:00 PM - 9:05 PM
Introduction and plan for the meeting
9:05 PM
Sheffield program overview
-
Neil Spooner
(
University of Sheffield
)
Sheffield program overview
Neil Spooner
(
University of Sheffield
)
9:05 PM - 9:15 PM
Overview of the Sheffield CYGNUS program
9:15 PM
Japan/Kobe program overview
-
Kentaro Miuchi
(
Kobe University
)
Japan/Kobe program overview
Kentaro Miuchi
(
Kobe University
)
9:15 PM - 9:25 PM
Japan/Kobe program overview
9:25 PM
Italian/CYGNO program overview
-
Elisabetta Baracchini
(
Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare
)
Italian/CYGNO program overview
Elisabetta Baracchini
(
Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare
)
9:25 PM - 9:35 PM
Italian/CYGNO program overview
9:35 PM
UNM program overview
-
Dinesh Loomba
(
UNM
)
UNM program overview
Dinesh Loomba
(
UNM
)
9:35 PM - 9:45 PM
The MIGDAL project and applications to directional DM and neutrino searches
9:45 PM
Hawaii program overview
-
Sven Vahsen
(
University of Hawaii
)
Hawaii program overview
Sven Vahsen
(
University of Hawaii
)
9:45 PM - 9:55 PM
Hawaii program overview
9:55 PM
Australian program overview
-
Lindsey Bignell
(
Australian National University
)
Australian program overview
Lindsey Bignell
(
Australian National University
)
9:55 PM - 10:00 PM
Australian CYGNUS program overview
10:00 PM
Dark matter, neutrinos, and directional detection
-
Ciaran O'Hare
(
University of Sydney
)
Dark matter, neutrinos, and directional detection
Ciaran O'Hare
(
University of Sydney
)
10:00 PM - 10:30 PM
I will discuss a few theoretical issues of relevance to directional detection. Firstly, how confident are we that there is a DM wind pointing back towards Cygnus? Then, I will explain what the “neutrino fog” is - a term increasingly being used in place of “neutrino floor” by the community. I will then describe how using the neutrino fog as a way to rank techniques for directional detection naturally leads to gas TPCs as the optimal strategy.
10:30 PM
Hints of negative ion drift operation with CYGNO optical readout approach
-
Elisabetta Baracchini
(
Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare
)
Hints of negative ion drift operation with CYGNO optical readout approach
Elisabetta Baracchini
(
Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare
)
10:30 PM - 10:50 PM
Tuesday, January 11, 2022
9:00 PM
Clustering and energy response of CYGNO 50 L prototype LIME
-
Emanuele Di Marco
(
Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare: Roma
)
Clustering and energy response of CYGNO 50 L prototype LIME
Emanuele Di Marco
(
Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare: Roma
)
9:00 PM - 9:17 PM
9:17 PM
Development of low RI molecular sieve for radon removal from gas
-
Hiroshi Ogawa
(
Nihon University
)
Development of low RI molecular sieve for radon removal from gas
Hiroshi Ogawa
(
Nihon University
)
9:17 PM - 9:34 PM
Molecular sieve (MS) is expected to remove impurities such as radon from gases that require low radioactivity in dark matter search detectors. For practical use, it is necessary to reduce the amount of radioactive impurities released from itself to the utmost limit. In this talk, I report on the development of zeolite with radon adsorption capacity by ion exchange of low-radioactive MS.
9:34 PM
Molecular sieve-based gas recycling system with radon reduction for rare-event gaseous detectors
-
Robert Renz Gregorio
(
University of Sheffield
)
Molecular sieve-based gas recycling system with radon reduction for rare-event gaseous detectors
Robert Renz Gregorio
(
University of Sheffield
)
9:34 PM - 9:51 PM
A new molecular sieve-based gas recycling system is presented that provides for simultaneous removal of both radon and common impurities from SF6:CF4:He gases in TPCs, hence minimising the total amount of gas required. Removal of internally-produced radon and associated progeny is important for background suppression whilst removal of outgassing and leaked-in contaminants such as water, oxygen and nitrogen is required to suppress capture of interaction-produced electrons which causes gain suppression. The system utilises a Vacuum Swing Adsorption (VSA) technique, allowing continuous long-term operation. Studies are presented of a new low radioactive molecular sieve, developed for this work and found to emanate radon up to 98% less per radon captured than commercial material.
9:51 PM
Electroluminescence and gas studies in CYGNO
-
Giorgio Dho
(
Gran Sasso Science Institute
)
Electroluminescence and gas studies in CYGNO
Giorgio Dho
(
Gran Sasso Science Institute
)
9:51 PM - 10:08 PM
10:08 PM
Studies on He-CF4-isobutane mixtures for the CYGNO TPC
-
Cristina Monteiro
(
Universidade de Coimbra
)
Studies on He-CF4-isobutane mixtures for the CYGNO TPC
Cristina Monteiro
(
Universidade de Coimbra
)
10:08 PM - 10:25 PM
10:25 PM
Towards Directional Dark Matter Detectors using High Gain Negative Ion TPCs
-
Ali McLean
(
University of Sheffield
)
Towards Directional Dark Matter Detectors using High Gain Negative Ion TPCs
Ali McLean
(
University of Sheffield
)
10:25 PM - 10:42 PM
10:42 PM
Recent updates of C/N-1.0 chamber and its circular system
-
Satoshi Higashino
(
Kobe University
)
Recent updates of C/N-1.0 chamber and its circular system
Satoshi Higashino
(
Kobe University
)
10:42 PM - 10:59 PM
After the detection of the first light of a radiation source using C/N-1.0, we solved various remaining issues; e.g. gas leak, spark and detector readout problems. We will introduce about these update and also report the development of our circular system.
10:59 PM
Validation of gas gain with Garfield++ simulation for negative ion gas TPC
-
Ryo Kubota
(
University of Kobe
)
Validation of gas gain with Garfield++ simulation for negative ion gas TPC
Ryo Kubota
(
University of Kobe
)
10:59 PM - 11:11 PM
The basis for Garfield ++ simulation for negative ion gas was developed last year. Two types of detach models (Threshold model & Cross-section model) were prepared and we simulate the gas gain for each. We confirmed that the measured gain in GEM and the results of simulation are consistent.
11:11 PM
Machine learning studies for improved electron background rejection in pixel TPCs
-
Jeffrey Schueler
(
University of Hawaii at Manoa
)
Machine learning studies for improved electron background rejection in pixel TPCs
Jeffrey Schueler
(
University of Hawaii at Manoa
)
11:11 PM - 11:33 PM
We present the status of ongoing studies comparing the electron background rejection performance of multivariate combinations of physically motivated observables tuned to optimize electron rejection performance with a convolutional neural network (CNN) event classifier trained directly on reconstructed 3D charge distributions of recoil events. Using samples of simulated charge distributions containing O(1e7) electron recoils and O(2e5) fluorine recoils after 25cm of drift in an 80:10:10 mixture of He:CF4:CHF3 at 60 torr, binned into 100um^3 voxels and ranging in energies between 0.5 and 10.5 keVee, we first show that combining nine predefined observables using either a boosted decision tree (BDT) or a feed forward neural network (NN) to classify recoils in this detector, leads to between a 1.5 and 5 fold increase in the number of rejected electrons as a function of energy at 50% F-recoil efficiency compared to a previously published multivariate combination of these same observables that doesn't use machine learning. We further show that training a CNN with fluorine and electron recoil charge distributions re-binned into a 32 x 32 x 32 voxel grid leads to a noticeable improvement in electron rejection over both the BDT and NN combinations of predefined observables at nearly all energies. Finally, we briefly summarize the status of extending this work to measurements from miniature TPCs with pixel ASIC readout.
11:33 PM
Snowmass process and white paper
-
Ciaran O'Hare
(
Zaragoza
)
Dinesh Loomba
(
UNM
)
Sven Vahsen
(
University of Hawaii
)
Snowmass process and white paper
Ciaran O'Hare
(
Zaragoza
)
Dinesh Loomba
(
UNM
)
Sven Vahsen
(
University of Hawaii
)
11:33 PM - 11:40 PM
Discussion of the Snowmass process and potential contributions to the white paper
Wednesday, January 12, 2022