SENSEI at SNOLAB: Single-Electron Event Rate and Implications for Dark Matter
We present results from data acquired by the SENSEI experiment at SNOLAB after a major upgrade in May 2023, which includes deploying 16 new sensors and replacing the copper trays that house the CCDs with a new light-tight design. We observe a single-electron event rate of $(1.39 \pm 0.11) \times 10^...
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Zusammenfassung: | We present results from data acquired by the SENSEI experiment at SNOLAB
after a major upgrade in May 2023, which includes deploying 16 new sensors and
replacing the copper trays that house the CCDs with a new light-tight design.
We observe a single-electron event rate of $(1.39 \pm 0.11) \times 10^{-5}$
e$^-$/pix/day, corresponding to $(39.8 \pm 3.1)$ e$^-$/gram/day. This is an
order-of-magnitude improvement compared to the previous lowest single-electron
rate in a silicon detector and the lowest for any photon detector in the
near-infrared-ultraviolet range. We use these data to obtain a 90% confidence
level upper bound of $1.53 \times 10^{-5}$ e$^-$/pix/day and to set constraints
on sub-GeV dark matter candidates that produce single-electron events. We
hypothesize that the data taken at SNOLAB in the previous run, with an older
tray design for the sensors, contained a larger rate of single-electron events
due to light leaks. We test this hypothesis using data from the SENSEI detector
located in the MINOS cavern at Fermilab. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2410.18716 |