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By News Staff | October 16th 2008 12:00 AM | 3 comments | Print | E-mail | Track Comments

A team of researchers in Canada say they have made a bold stride in the struggle to detect dark matter - and it involves listening and WIMPS. The PICASSO collaboration has documented the discovery of a significant difference between the acoustic signals induced by neutrons and alpha particles in a detector based on superheated liquids.

Since neutron induced signals are very similar to dark matter induced signals, this new discovery published in the New Journal of Physics, could lead to improved background suppression in dark matter searches with this type of detector.

So far, alpha particles have been an obstacle to the detection of dark matter's weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPs) in PICASSO. This detector, which is based on the operation principle of the classic bubble chamber, is sensitive to alpha particles over exactly the same temperature and energy range, therefore making it very difficult to discriminate between the two types of particles.

Alpha particles are relatively common on Earth, emitted by radioactive nuclei such as uranium, and thorium, and are therefore also present in traces in the detector material itself. WIMPs are thought to fill the large spaces between galaxies, concentrating around them in gigantic clouds. As the Earth moves together with the sun through the Milky Way's dark matter cloud, researchers hope to detect occasional collisions of a WIMP particle with an atom in their detectors.

Teams of researchers around the globe work deep underground to create the best conditions to isolate WIMPs from their travelling companions, namely neutrons, which are created by cosmic rays. Underground, teams in the US, Canada, England, Italy, Japan, Korea and Russia have long been sparring over the best detection methods for WIMPs.

The Canadian-American-Czech team based at SNOLAB, using their PICASSO detector, experimented with very sensitive Fluorine-based superheated liquids and analysed acoustic signals following phase transitions induced by alpha particles and WIMP like, neutron induced recoil nuclei. To their surprise they found a significant difference in amplitudes of the acoustic signals, which has never been observed before.

As experiment spokesperson Viktor Zacek (Université de Montréal) said, "When we looked at our calibration data taken with neutrons and compared them with our alpha background data we saw a peculiar difference which we attributed first to some detector instabilities or gain drifts in our electronics. However when we checked the data and refined the analysis the discrimination effect became even more pronounced."

Detection of WIMPs is the first challenge in the struggle to understand dark matter. Much of our understanding until now has been hypothetical. There is convincing astronomical evidence to suggest that 23 per cent of the Universe is made up of dark matter – different from the matter with protons, neutrons and electrons that we are accustomed to.

This dark matter is between a hundred to a thousand times heavier than a proton and interacts extremely weakly with itself and 'ordinary' matter. It is believed it was created during the Big bang and that it now surrounds most galaxies, and also our Milky Way in gigantic clouds.


Comments

Hatice Cullingford's picture
This is great to know. I would like to add another source of alpha particles, Pu: ~ Plutonium has been released to the environment primarily by atmospheric testing of nuclear weapons and by accidents at weapons production and utilization facilities. In addition, accidents involve weapons transport satellite reentry...* ~ Since 1945, approximately 7700 kg has been released onto Earth through nuclear explosions.+ ~ There are several tonnes of plutonium in our biosphere, a legacy of atmospheric weapons testing in the 1950s and 1960s.+ ~ It displays five ionic oxidation states in aqueous solution:+ PuIII, as Pu3+ (blue lavender) PuIV, as Pu4+ (yellow brown) PuVI, as PuO22+ (pink orange) PuV, as PuO2+ (thought to be pink; this ion is unstable in solution and will disproportionate into Pu4+ and PuO22+; the Pu4+ will then oxidize the remaining PuO2+ to PuO22+, being reduced in turn to Pu3+. Thus, aqueous solutions of plutonium tend over time towards a mixture of Pu3+ and PuO22+.) PuVII, as PuO52- (dark red); the heptavalent ion is rare and prepared only under extreme oxidizing conditions. * http://www.eoearth.org/article/Plutonium + http://www.3rd1000.com/elements/Plutonium.htm
rholley's picture
Hatice,

You might like to read this obituary of Eric Voice, who volunteered to ingest plutonium in order to measure the effects of radioactivity on the body and to try to remove public misconceptions about the dangers of nuclear technology.

Robert H. Olley
Physics Department
University of Reading
England

Hatice Cullingford's picture
Hi Robert, Thanks for the read. I had not seen it. The article said: "The study was designed to find out how to treat people in the event of a nuclear accident." Have they found out how to treat in a very unlikely scenario like ingesting Pu? Transparency helps remove some misconceptions. Hatice

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