Technical Design Report for the AMoRE $0\nu\beta\beta$ Decay Search Experiment
V. Alenkov, P. Aryal, J. Beyer, R.S. Boiko, K. Boonin, O. Buzanov, N., Chanthima, M.K. Cheoun D.M. Chernyak, J. Choi, S. Choi, F.A. Danevich, M., Djamal, D. Drung, C. Enss, A. Fleischmann, A.M. Gangapshev, L. Gastaldo,, Yu.M. Gavriljuk, A.M. Gezhaev, V.I. Gurentsov, D.H Ha

TL;DR
The AMoRE experiment employs cryogenic techniques and advanced detectors to search for neutrinoless double-beta decay in extsuperscript{100}Mo, aiming to reach sensitivities relevant to the inverted neutrino mass hierarchy.
Contribution
This report details the design and technological advancements of the AMoRE experiment, including the use of high-purity crystals, MMC sensors, and background rejection methods for neutrinoless double-beta decay search.
Findings
Crystals produce bright scintillation light at cryogenic temperatures.
Energy resolution enables discrimination of signal from background.
Projected sensitivity reaches 20-50 meV for Majorana neutrino mass.
Abstract
The AMoRE (Advanced Mo-based Rare process Experiment) project is a series of experiments that use advanced cryogenic techniques to search for the neutrinoless double-beta decay of \mohundred. The work is being carried out by an international collaboration of researchers from eight countries. These searches involve high precision measurements of radiation-induced temperature changes and scintillation light produced in ultra-pure \Mo[100]-enriched and \Ca[48]-depleted calcium molybdate () crystals that are located in a deep underground laboratory in Korea. The \mohundred nuclide was chosen for this \zeronubb decay search because of its high -value and favorable nuclear matrix element. Tests have demonstrated that \camo crystals produce the brightest scintillation light among all of the molybdate crystals, both at room and at cryogenic temperatures.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeutrino Physics Research · Particle physics theoretical and experimental studies · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena
