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CUTE: A Low Background Facility for Testing Cryogenic Dark Matter Detectors

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Abstract

The Cryogenic Underground Test (CUTE) facility will be located 2 km underground in the SNOLAB laboratory, near Sudbury (Ontario, Canada). It is primarily designed to test the performances of cryogenic detectors of the Super-Cryogenic Dark Matter Search (SuperCDMS) experiment which will be installed next to CUTE. As a facility, it will also be accessible to scientists developing innovative cryogenic detectors for rare events search like dark matter or double-beta decay. The low temperature required to operate the cryogenic detectors is reached via an advanced dry dilution refrigerator from CryoConcept (France). The ‘Ultra Quiet Technique’ (UQT®) reduces the vibration transmission by using a proprietary gas-coupled thermal link between the two-stage pulse tube and the cryostat. In order to install the cryostat into a shielding water tank, we have developed a suspension system which decouples the cryostat from the environment with a low stiffness support, making a mechanical low-pass filter with a roll-off below 2 Hz for the vertical attenuation. We report the design choices made for the mechanical architecture to limit the vibration transmission and the material selection to achieve a low radioactive background rate in the detector. The expected background rate is less than 5 counts/day per kg of Ge detector in the 0–1 keV energy range.

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Acknowledgements

The CUTE project is funded through Prof. Gilles Gerbier’s Canada Excellence Research chair in Astroparticle Physics at Queen’s University; the authors acknowledge Emiliano Olivieri and Maurice Chapellier (CSNSM), Maryvonne DeJesus (IPNL), Ph. Bonnet and Jerome Lecomte (CryoConcept) for various fruitful discussions on the design choices.

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Correspondence to Ph. Camus.

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Camus, P., Cazes, A., Dastgheibi-Fard, A. et al. CUTE: A Low Background Facility for Testing Cryogenic Dark Matter Detectors. J Low Temp Phys 193, 813–818 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10909-018-2014-0

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10909-018-2014-0

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