Unraveling xenon primary scintillation yield for cutting-edge rare event experiments
C.A.O. Henriques, J.M.R. Teixeira, P.A.O.C. Silva, R.D.P. Mano, J.M.F., dos Santos, C.M.B. Monteiro

TL;DR
This study systematically measures the primary scintillation yield in gaseous xenon, resolving discrepancies in previous data and providing reliable values crucial for rare event detection experiments.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive measurement of the absolute primary scintillation yield in GXe across various radiation types and energies, clarifying previous inconsistencies.
Findings
wsc for x/gamma-rays is around 38.7 eV with minimal dependence on energy or radiation type
Results align with simulations and previous alpha-particle data
Discrepancies with earlier literature are attributed to systematic errors
Abstract
Xenon scintillation has been widely used in rare event detection experiments such as neutrinoless double beta decay, double electron captures and dark matter searches. Nonetheless, experimental values for primary scintillation yield in gaseous xenon (GXe) remain scarce and dispersed. The mean energy required to produce a scintillation photon, wsc, in GXe in the absence of recombination has been measured to be in the range of 34-111 eV. Lower values were reported for alpha-particles when compared to electrons produced by gamma- or x-rays. Since wsc is expected to be similar for x-, gamma-rays or electrons and alpha-particles, the above difference cannot be understood. In addition, one may pose the question of a dependence of wsc on photon energy. We carried out a systematic study on the absolute primary scintillation yield in GXe for electric fields in the 70-300 V/cm/bar range and for…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena · Atomic and Subatomic Physics Research · Radiation Detection and Scintillator Technologies
