Simulation and background characterisation of the SABRE South experiment: SABRE South Collaboration
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Barberio, E.
Baroncelli, T
Bignell, Lindsey
Bolognino, I.
Brooks, Geoffrey
Dastgiri, Ferdos
D'Imperio, G.
Di Giacinto, A.
Duffy, A R
Froehlich, Michaela
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Springer
Abstract
SABRE (Sodium iodide with Active Background REjection) is a direct detection dark matter experiment based on arrays of radio-pure NaI(Tl) crystals. The experiment aims at achieving an ultra-low background rate and its primary goal is to confirm or refute the results from the DAMA/LIBRA experiment. The SABRE Proof-of-Principle phase was carried out in 2020–2021 at the Gran Sasso National Laboratory (LNGS), in Italy. The next phase consists of two full-scale experiments: SABRE South at the Stawell Underground Physics Laboratory, in Australia, and SABRE North at LNGS. This paper focuses on SABRE South and presents a detailed simulation of the detector, which is used to characterise the background for dark matter searches including DAMA/LIBRA-like modulation. We estimate an overall background of 0.72 cpd/kg/ in the energy range 1–6 primarily due to radioactive contamination in the crystals. Given this level of background and considering that the SABRE South has a target mass of 50 kg, we expect to exclude (confirm) DAMA/LIBRA modulation at within 2.5 years of data taking.
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European Physical Journal C
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