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The CRESST experiment: Recent results and prospects

Abstract:
The CRESST experiment seeks hypothetical WIMP particles that could account for the bulk of dark matter in the Universe. The detectors are cryogenic calorimeters in which WIMPs would scatter elastically on nuclei, releasing phonons. The first phase of the experiment has successfully deployed several 262 g sapphire devices in the Gran Sasso underground laboratories. A main source of background has been identified as microscopic mechanical fracturing of the crystals, and has been eliminated, improving the background rate by up to three orders of magnitude at low energies, leaving a rate close to one count per day per kg and per keV above 10 keV recoil energy. This background now appears to be dominated by radioactivity, and future CRESST scintillating calorimeters which simultaneously measure light and phonons will allow rejection of a great Dart of it.
Publication status:
Published

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Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
MPLS
Department:
Physics
Sub department:
Particle Physics
Role:
Author


Journal:
COSMOLOGY AND PARTICLE PHYSICS More from this journal
Volume:
555
Pages:
381-386
Publication date:
2001-01-01
Event title:
International Conference on Cosmology and Particle Physics (CAPP 2000)
ISSN:
0094-243X
ISBN:
1563969866


Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:29526
UUID:
uuid:28ec11d9-b5ff-4f4b-ad8d-6bbfaeb8a491
Local pid:
pubs:29526
Source identifiers:
29526
Deposit date:
2012-12-19
ARK identifier:

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