4.4 Article

A novel experimental system for the KDK measurement of the 40K decay scheme relevant for rare event searches

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.nima.2021.165593

Keywords

Potassium; Electron capture; DAMA; Rare decays; Geochronology; SDD; MTAS; KSr2I5:Eu

Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy [DEAC0500OR22725]
  2. Faculty of Arts and Science of Queen's University
  3. McDonald Institute
  4. Joint Institute for Nuclear Physics and Applications, USA
  5. U.S. Depart-ment of Homeland Security [2014DN077ARI08801]
  6. NSERC through SAPIN grant
  7. NSERC through SAP RTI grant

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Potassium-40 is a long-lived, naturally occurring radioactive isotope that serves as a background for rare event searches and geochronological dating techniques. The electron capture branching ratio to the ground state of Ar-40 affects result interpretation accuracy. The KDK collaboration is measuring this decay using different methods to improve precision.
Potassium-40 (K-40) is a long-lived, naturally occurring radioactive isotope. The decay products are prominent backgrounds for many rare event searches, including those involving NaI-based scintillators. K-40 also plays a role in geochronological dating techniques. The branching ratio of the electron capture directly to the ground state of Ar-40 has never been measured, which can cause difficulty in interpreting certain results or can lead to lack of precision depending on the field and analysis technique. The KDK (Potassium (K) Decay (DK)) collaboration is measuring this decay. A composite method has a silicon drift detector with an enriched, thermally deposited K-40 source inside the Modular Total Absorption Spectrometer. This setup has been characterized in terms of energy calibration, gamma tagging efficiency, live time and false negatives and positives. A complementary, homogeneous, method is also discussed; it employs a KSr2I5:Eu scintillator as source and detector.

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