HEROICA: an Underground Facility for the Fast Screening of Germanium Detectors
E. Andreotti, A. Garfagnini, W. Maneschg, N. Barros, G. Benato, R., Brugnera, F. Costa, R. Falkenstein, K. K. Guthikonda, A. Hegai, S. Hemmer, M., Hult, K. Jaenner, T. Kihm, B. Lehnert, H. Liao, A. Lubashevskiy, G. Lutter,, G. Marissens, L. Modenese, L. Pandola, M. Reissfelder

TL;DR
HEROICA is an underground facility designed for rapid and comprehensive screening of germanium detectors, significantly reducing cosmic activation and supporting large-scale production for neutrinoless double beta decay experiments.
Contribution
The paper introduces HEROICA, a new underground infrastructure that enables fast, thorough characterization of germanium detectors, crucial for next-generation neutrino experiments.
Findings
Effective reduction of cosmic muon flux by four orders of magnitude.
Successful testing of a complete quality control chain on prototype detectors.
Demonstrated capability for rapid screening suitable for large-scale detector production.
Abstract
An infrastructure to characterize germanium detectors has been designed and constructed at the HADES Underground Research Laboratory, located in Mol (Belgium). Thanks to the 223m overburden of clay and sand, the muon flux is lowered by four orders of magnitude. This natural shield minimizes the exposure of radio-pure germanium material to cosmic radiation resulting in a significant suppression of cosmogenic activation in the germanium detectors. The project has been strongly motivated by a special production of germanium detectors for the GERDA experiment. GERDA, currently collecting data at the Laboratori Nazionali del Gran Sasso of INFN, is searching for the neutrinoless double beta decay of 76Ge. In the near future, GERDA will increase its mass and sensitivity by adding new Broad Energy Germanium (BEGe) detectors. The production of the BEGe detectors is done at Canberra in Olen…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
