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The SABRE South technical design report executive...
Journal article

The SABRE South technical design report executive summary

Abstract

In this technical design report (TDR) executive summary we describe the SABRE South detector to be built at the Stawell Underground Physics Laboratory (SUPL). The SABRE South detector is designed to test the long-standing DAMA/LIBRA signal of an annually modulating rate consistent with dark matter by using the same target material. Located in the Southern Hemisphere, the detector is uniquely positioned to disentangle modulating seasonal effects. SABRE South uses seven ultra-high purity NaI(Tl) crystals (with a total target mass of either 35 kg or 50 kg), hermetically sealed in copper enclosures that are suspended within a liquid scintillator active veto. High quantum efficiency and low background Hamamatsu R11065 photomultiplier tubes are directly coupled to both ends of the crystal, and enclosed with the crystal in an oxygen free copper enclosure. The active veto system consists of 11.6 kL of linear alkylbenzene (LAB) doped with a mixture of fluorophores and contained in a steel vessel, which is instrumented with at least 18 Hamamatsu R5912 photomultipliers. The active veto tags key radiogenic backgrounds intrinsic to the crystals, such as 40K, and is expected to suppress the total background by 27% in the 1–6 keV region of interest. In addition to the liquid scintillator veto, a muon veto is positioned above the detector shielding. This muon veto consists of eight EJ-200 scintillator modules, with Hamamatsu R13089 photomultipliers coupled to both ends. With an expected total background of 0.72 cpd/kg/keV, SABRE South can test the DAMA/LIBRA signal with 5σ discovery or 3σ exclusion after two years of data taking.

Authors

Barberio E; Baroncelli T; Bashu VU; Bignell LJ; Bolognino I; Brooks G; Chhun SS; Dastgiri F; Di Giacinto A; D'Imperio G

Journal

Journal of Instrumentation, Vol. 20, No. 04,

Publisher

IOP Publishing

Publication Date

April 1, 2025

DOI

10.1088/1748-0221/20/04/t04001

ISSN

1748-0221

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