Conceptual design and simulation of a water Cherenkov muon veto for the XENON1T experiment
E. Aprile, F. Agostini, M. Alfonsi, K. Arisaka, F. Arneodo, M. Auger,, C. Balan, P. Barrow, L. Baudis, B. Bauermeister, A. Behrens, P. Beltrame, K., Bokeloh, A. Breskin, A. Brown, E. Brown, S. Bruenner, G. Bruno, R. Budnik, J., M. R. Cardoso, A.P. Colijn, H. Contreras

TL;DR
This paper presents the design and simulation of a water Cherenkov muon veto system for the XENON1T dark matter detector, achieving high muon detection efficiency and significantly reducing muon-induced backgrounds.
Contribution
It introduces a novel water Cherenkov detector design optimized through Monte Carlo simulations for effective muon vetoing in XENON1T.
Findings
Muon detection efficiency >99.5%
Secondary particle shower detection >70%
Muon-induced neutron background negligible
Abstract
XENON is a dark matter direct detection project, consisting of a time projection chamber (TPC) filled with liquid xenon as detection medium. The construction of the next generation detector, XENON1T, is presently taking place at the Laboratori Nazionali del Gran Sasso (LNGS) in Italy. It aims at a sensitivity to spin-independent cross sections of for WIMP masses around 50 GeV/c, which requires a background reduction by two orders of magnitude compared to XENON100, the current generation detector. An active system that is able to tag muons and muon-induced backgrounds is critical for this goal. A water Cherenkov detector of 10 m height and diameter has been therefore developed, equipped with 8 inch photomultipliers and cladded by a reflective foil. We present the design and optimization study for this detector, which has been…
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