The Argon Dark Matter (ArDM-1t) experiment is a ton-scale liquid argon (LAr) double-phase time projection chamber designed for direct Dark Matter searches. Such a device allows to explore the low energy frontier in LAr with a charge imaging detector. The ionization charge is extracted from the liquid into the gas phase and there amplified by the use of a Large Electron Multiplier in order to reduce the detection threshold. Direct detection of the ionization charge with fine spatial granularity, combined with a measurement of the amplitude and time evolution of the associated primary scintillation light, provide powerful tools for the identification of WIMP interactions against the background due to electrons, photons and possibly neutrons if scattering more than once. A one ton LAr detector is presently installed on surface at CERN to fully test all functionalities and it will be soon moved to an underground location. We will emphasize here the lessons learned from such a device for the design of a large LAr TPC for neutrino oscillation, proton decay and astrophysical neutrinos searches.
CITATION STYLE
Marchionni, A., Amsler, C., Badertscher, A., Boccone, V., Bueno, A., Carmona-Benitez, C., … Viant, T. (2011). ArDM: A ton-scale LAr detector for direct Dark Matter searches. In Journal of Physics: Conference Series (Vol. 308). Institute of Physics Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1088/1742-6596/308/1/012006
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