14-15 October 2013
Garching, Germany
Europe/Berlin timezone

Introducing WOM: The Wavelength-Shifting Optical Module

14 Oct 2013, 11:30
20m
Garching, Germany

Garching, Germany

LRZ Leibniz-Rechenzentrum der Bayerischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, Boltzmannstraße 1, 85748 Garching <img alt src="https://events.icecube.wisc.edu/conferenceDisplay.py/getPic?picId=1&confId=52"> Directions to the <a href="http://www.lrz.de/wir/kontakt/weg_en/">LRZ</a> Buy the XXL train ticket each day from downtown Munich. As you leave the Garching Forschungszentrum station, walk straight ahead along the avenue of poplar trees. Our building will then be the last one on the right, and Kim will be to the right after you go in the door on that corner. You can check the price of your train ticket <a href="http://www.mvv-muenchen.de/en/homepage/index.html">here</a>
Wavelength-shifting optical modules - Stephan Schulte Low Energy

Speaker

Lukas Schulte (o=bonn,ou=Institutions,dc=icecube,dc=wisc,dc=edu)

Description

Large-scale underground water-Cherenkov neutrino observatories rely on single photon sensors whose sensitive area for Cherenkov photons one wants to maximise. Low dark noise rates and dense module spacing will thereby allow to substantially decrease the energy threshold in future projects. We describe a feasibility study of a novel type of single photon sensor that employs organic wavelength-shifting material (WLS) to capture Cherenkov photons and guide them to a PMT readout. Different WLS materials have been tested in lab measurements as candidates for use in such a sensor and photon capture efficiencies as high as 50 % have been achieved. Based on these findings we estimate that the effective photosensitive area of a prototype built with existing technology can easily exceed that of modules currently used e. g. in IceCube. Additionally, the dark noise rate of such a module can be exceptionally low in the order of 10 Hz. This is of special importance when targeting low-energy neutrinos that yield only few photons that need to be distinguished from noise hits

Primary author

Lukas Schulte (o=bonn,ou=Institutions,dc=icecube,dc=wisc,dc=edu)

Co-authors

Marek Kowalski (o=bonn,ou=Institutions,dc=icecube,dc=wisc,dc=edu) Sebastian Böser (Universität Bonn)

Presentation Materials