Detection of the barium daughter in $^{136}$Xe $\to ^{136}$Ba $+$ 2e$^{-}$ by \textit{in situ} single-molecule fluorescence imaging
ORAL
Abstract
To proceed toward effective ``discovery class'' ton-scale detectors in the search for neutrino-less double beta decay, a robust technique for rejection of all radioactivity-induced backgrounds is urgently needed. An efficient technique for detection of the barium daughter in the decay $^{136}$Xe $\to ^{136}$Ba $+$ 2e$^{-}$ would provide a long-sought pathway toward this goal. Single-molecule fluorescent imaging appears to offer a new way to detect the barium daughter atom, which emerges naturally in an ionized state in pure xenon. A doubly charged barium ion can initiate a chelation process with a non-fluorescent precursor molecule, leading to a highly fluorescent complex. Repeated photo-excitation of the complex can reveal both presence and location of a single ionized atom with high precision and selectivity. Detection within the active volume of a xenon gas Time Projection Chamber operating at high pressure would be automatic, and with a capability for redundant confirmation.
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Authors
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David Nygren
University of Texas at Arlington