A flexible scintillation light apparatus for rare event searches
Valter Bonvicini, Silvia Capelli, Oliviero Cremonesi, Giacomo, Cucciati, Luca Gironi, Maura Pavan, Ezio Previtali, Monica Sisti

TL;DR
This paper proposes a novel scintillation detector array using cooled silicon detectors and ultra-pure crystals, offering a scalable, low-cost, and highly sensitive method for detecting neutrinoless double beta decay, crucial for understanding neutrino properties.
Contribution
The paper introduces a new detector technology combining silicon arrays and scintillation crystals, achieving high sensitivity and background suppression for rare decay searches.
Findings
A 54 kg array of CaMoO4 detectors can reach ~10^24 years sensitivity in one year.
A 40CaMoO4 array can achieve ~10^25 years sensitivity in one year.
The proposed setup offers energy resolution, scalability, and background reduction advantages.
Abstract
Compelling experimental evidences of neutrino oscillations and their implication that neutrinos are massive particles have given neutrinoless double beta decay a central role in astroparticle physics. In fact, the discovery of this elusive decay would be a major breakthrough, unveiling that neutrino and antineutrino are the same particle and that the lepton number is not conserved. It would also impact our efforts to establish the absolute neutrino mass scale and, ultimately, understand elementary particle interaction unification. All current experimental programs to search for neutrinoless double beta decay are facing with the technical and financial challenge of increasing the experimental mass while maintaining incredibly low levels of spurious background. The new concept described in this paper could be the answer which combines all the features of an ideal experiment: energy…
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