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STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Detector for hunting dark matter installed a mile underground
by Staff Writers
London UK (SPX) Oct 30, 2019

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The central component of LUX-ZEPLIN (LZ) - the largest direct-detection dark matter experiment in the US - has been slowly lowered 4,850 feet down a shaft formerly used in gold-mining operations by a team involving UCL physicists.

Although dark matter accounts for about 27 percent of the universe, we do not know what it is made of and experiments have yet to make direct contact with a particle - it has only been detected through its gravitational effects on normal matter.

Once operational next year, the LZ aims to change this by hunting theorised dark matter particles called WIMPs, or weakly interacting massive particles. It is 100 times more sensitive than its predecessor experiment, called LUX, which operated in the same underground space.

Professor Cham Ghag (UCL Physics and Astronomy), UCL LZ collaboration scientist, said: "Understanding the nature of the elusive dark matter is recognized as one of the highest priorities in science and we are building the most sensitive machine yet to detect WIMPS, which are the leading theoretical candidate for a dark matter particle.

"If WIMPS exist, billions of particles pass through your hand every second but to directly hunt this mysterious particle, we have to bury our detector deep underground to shield it from all the other particles which steadily bombard Earth's surface."

Last week, crews at the Sanford Underground Research Facility (SURF) in South Dakota strapped the 5,000-pound, 9-foot-tall particle detector to its resting place following extensive planning and two test moves of a "dummy" detector to ensure its safe delivery.

Theresa Fruth, a postdoctoral research fellow at UCL Physics and Astronomy who works on LZ's central detector, said that keeping LZ sealed from any contaminants during its journey was a high priority as even the slightest traces of dust and dirt could ultimately affect its measurements.

"From a science perspective, we wanted the detector to come down exactly as it was on the surface," she said. "The structural integrity is incredibly important, but so is the cleanliness, because we've been building this detector for 10 months in a clean room. Before the move, the detector was bagged twice and inserted in the transporter structure. Then, the transporter was wrapped with another layer of strong plastic. We also need to move all our equipment underground so we can do the rest of the installation work underground."

The central detector, known as the LZ cryostat and time projection chamber, will ultimately be filled with 10 tons of liquid xenon chilled to minus 148 degrees Fahrenheit. Scientists hope to capture flashes of light that are produced when dark matter particles interact with the heavy xenon atoms in this cryostat.

Pawel Majewski of the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, who led the design, fabrication, cleaning, and delivery of LZ's inner cryostat vessel for the Science and Technology Facilities Council, said: "Now it is extremely gratifying to see it ... holding the heart of the experiment and resting in its final place in the Davis Campus, one mile underground."

To limit false signals of unwanted particle "noise," the LZ's cryostat will be surrounded by a tank filled with a liquid known as a scintillator, which in turn will be embedded within a large water tank that provides a further buffer layer.

Murdock "Gil" Gilchriese, LZ project director and a physicist at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab), which is the lead institution for the LZ project, said, "Next, the cryostat will be wrapped with multiple layers of insulation, and a few other exterior components will be installed. Then it will get lowered into the outer cryostat vessel. It will take months to hook up and check out all of the cables and make everything vacuum-tight."

Most of the LZ work is now concentrated underground, with the team working multiple shifts to complete the LZ assembly and installation. UCL is playing a key role in getting the core of the detector up and running for data taking, and then data analysis.

There are plans to begin testing the process of liquefying xenon gas for LZ in November using a mock cryostat, and to fill the actual cryostat with xenon in spring 2020. Project completion could come as soon as July 2020.


Related Links
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STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Dark matter search enters new chapter
Hamburg, Germany (SPX) Oct 29, 2019
The international ALPS II ("Any light particle search") collaboration installed the first of 24 superconducting magnets today, marking the start of the installation of a unique particle physics experiment to look for dark matter. Located at the German research centre DESY in Hamburg, it is set to start taking data in 2021 by looking for dark matter particles that literally make light shine through a wall, thus providing clues to one of the biggest questions in physics today: what is the nature of dark m ... read more

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