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nEXO: neutrinoless double beta decay search beyond 10(28) year half-life sensitivity
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

nEXO: neutrinoless double beta decay search beyond 10(28) year half-life sensitivity

G. Adhikari, S. Al Kharusi, E. Angelico, G. Anton, I. J. Arnquist, Badhrees, J. Bane, Belov, E. P. Bernard, T. Bhatta, …
Journal of physics. G, Nuclear and particle physics, v 49(1), p015104
01 Jan 2022
url
http://arxiv.org/abs/2106.16243View
Accepted (AM)Open Access (License Unspecified) Open

Abstract

Physical Sciences Physics Physics, Nuclear Physics, Particles & Fields Science & Technology ESI Highly Cited Paper (Incites)
The nEXO neutrinoless double beta (0 nu beta beta) decay experiment is designed to use a time projection chamber and 5000 kg of isotopically enriched liquid xenon to search for the decay in Xe-136. Progress in the detector design, paired with higher fidelity in its simulation and an advanced data analysis, based on the one used for the final results of EXO-200, produce a sensitivity prediction that exceeds the half-life of 10(28) years. Specifically, improvements have been made in the understanding of production of scintillation photons and charge as well as of their transport and reconstruction in the detector. The more detailed knowledge of the detector construction has been paired with more assays for trace radioactivity in different materials. In particular, the use of custom electroformed copper is now incorporated in the design, leading to a substantial reduction in backgrounds from the intrinsic radioactivity of detector materials. Furthermore, a number of assumptions from previous sensitivity projections have gained further support from interim work validating the nEXO experiment concept. Together these improvements and updates suggest that the nEXO experiment will reach a half-life sensitivity of 1.35 x 10(28) yr at 90% confidence level in 10 years of data taking, covering the parameter space associated with the inverted neutrino mass ordering, along with a significant portion of the parameter space for the normal ordering scenario, for almost all nuclear matrix elements. The effects of backgrounds deviating from the nominal values used for the projections are also illustrated, concluding that the nEXO design is robust against a number of imperfections of the model.

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Web of Science research areas
Physics, Nuclear
Physics, Particles & Fields
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