Instruments (Jan 2022)

The CYGNO Experiment

  • Fernando Domingues Amaro,
  • Elisabetta Baracchini,
  • Luigi Benussi,
  • Stefano Bianco,
  • Cesidio Capoccia,
  • Michele Caponero,
  • Danilo Santos Cardoso,
  • Gianluca Cavoto,
  • André Cortez,
  • Igor Abritta Costa,
  • Rita Joanna da Cruz Roque,
  • Emiliano Dané,
  • Giorgio Dho,
  • Flaminia Di Giambattista,
  • Emanuele Di Marco,
  • Giovanni Grilli di Cortona,
  • Giulia D’Imperio,
  • Francesco Iacoangeli,
  • Herman Pessoa Lima Júnior,
  • Guilherme Sebastiao Pinheiro Lopes,
  • Amaro da Silva Lopes Júnior,
  • Giovanni Maccarrone,
  • Rui Daniel Passos Mano,
  • Michela Marafini,
  • Robert Renz Marcelo Gregorio,
  • David José Gaspar Marques,
  • Giovanni Mazzitelli,
  • Alasdair Gregor McLean,
  • Andrea Messina,
  • Cristina Maria Bernardes Monteiro,
  • Rafael Antunes Nobrega,
  • Igor Fonseca Pains,
  • Emiliano Paoletti,
  • Luciano Passamonti,
  • Sandro Pelosi,
  • Fabrizio Petrucci,
  • Stefano Piacentini,
  • Davide Piccolo,
  • Daniele Pierluigi,
  • Davide Pinci,
  • Atul Prajapati,
  • Francesco Renga,
  • Filippo Rosatelli,
  • Alessandro Russo,
  • Joaquim Marques Ferreira dos Santos,
  • Giovanna Saviano,
  • Neil John Curwen Spooner,
  • Roberto Tesauro,
  • Sandro Tomassini,
  • Samuele Torelli

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/instruments6010006
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1
p. 6

Abstract

Read online

The search for a novel technology able to detect and reconstruct nuclear and electron recoil events with the energy of a few keV has become more and more important now that large regions of high-mass dark matter (DM) candidates have been excluded. Moreover, a detector sensitive to incoming particle direction will be crucial in the case of DM discovery to open the possibility of studying its properties. Gaseous time projection chambers (TPC) with optical readout are very promising detectors combining the detailed event information provided by the TPC technique with the high sensitivity and granularity of latest-generation scientific light sensors. The CYGNO experiment (a CYGNus module with Optical readout) aims to exploit the optical readout approach of multiple-GEM structures in large volume TPCs for the study of rare events as interactions of low-mass DM or solar neutrinos. The combined use of high-granularity sCMOS cameras and fast light sensors allows the reconstruction of the 3D direction of the tracks, offering good energy resolution and very high sensitivity in the few keV energy range, together with a very good particle identification useful for distinguishing nuclear recoils from electronic recoils. This experiment is part of the CYGNUS proto-collaboration, which aims at constructing a network of underground observatories for directional DM search. A one cubic meter demonstrator is expected to be built in 2022/23 aiming at a larger scale apparatus (30 m3–100 m3) at a later stage.

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