2013
Quantum Dots and Particle Direction Reconstruction in Liquid Scintillators
by
→
Pacific/Honolulu
420 (Watanabe hall)
420
Watanabe hall
Description
The search for neutrinoless double-beta decay is currently one of the
most important experimental tasks in neutrino physics. Liquid
scintillator detectors have proven to be very successful in neutrino
physics. Major results, for example the measurements of the mixing angle
θ13 in 2012, have been obtained using this technique. This talk covers
two recent developments towards the improvement of
scintillator-photodetector systems. First, nanotechnology may hold the
key to improving liquid scintillators. Quantum dots have unique, tunable
optical properties and they can be made from candidate isotopes for
neutrinoless double beta decay. Requirements and optical
characterizations of quantum-dot-doped liquid scintillators are
presented. Second, a possibility of significantly improving the
capabilities of scintillator detectors is direction reconstruction for
charged particles. Direction information would be a powerful handle in
background suppression when searching for rare processes. Simulation
results are presented, analyzing detector advances in timing,
photodetector spectral response, and scintillator emission spectra. It
is shown that the early directional Cerenkov light can be potentially
separated from the much more abundant scintillation light even at low
electron energies of several MeV.