Cryogenic Micro-Calorimeters for studies of LE Implanted RNBs P. A. Voytas Physics Department, Wittenberg University, Springfield, OH 45501-0720 USA Abstract. Cryogenic micro-calorimeters can serve as sensitive and efficient high-resolution detectors for low-energy phenomena–particularly those involving short-range products. Specific details of the use of these detectors will be discussed in the context of recent measurements of the L/K capture ratio in 7Be [1]. Applications to other low-energy measurements will also be explored. INTRODUCTION Absorber Many discoveries in physics (as well as other fields) have been the result (or at least the beneficiaries) of technological advancement. Such advancements improve our ability to probe and to observe a great variety of phenomena. Over the last 15 years, the cryogenic microcalorimeter has emerged as a technology with unique capabilities. Combined with the capability for implantation that comes with the availability of low energy (LE) radioactive nuclear beams (RNB), microcalorimeters have been opening up new measurement possibilities, particularly for low-energy nuclear phenomena. Thermometer Weak Link Heat Sink FIGURE 1. Schematic of a cryogenic micro-calorimeter. (NTD) thermistor. The sensitivity of calorimeters based on these thermometers is governed by the random transfer of energy between the absorber/thermometer and the heat sink. A simplistic statistical model of these fluctuations in energy results in an expression [2] for their amplitude: ∆E 2 kT02C (1) CRYOGENIC MICRO-CALORIMETERS As the name implies, cryogenic micro-calorimeters operate on the long-understood principles of calorimetry. A given energy deposited in a given material results in a temperature rise. The cryogenic micro-calorimeter consists of a sample or absorber (of heat capacity C) in which the deposited energy causes the temperature rise, some sort of thermometer to measure the temperature, and a weak thermal link (of thermal conductivity G) connected to a heat sink. A schematic diagram of such a device is shown in Figure 1. There are two widespread implementations of the cryogenic micro-calorimeter, differing primarily in the type of thermometer employed. Here, T0 is the temperature of the heat sink, C is the (temperature dependent) heat capacity of the absorber, and k is the Boltzmann constant. These fluctuations represent the background noise of the system above which any signal must be detected. From Equation 1 it is easy to see that a low temperature is beneficial directly (through the T02 term) and indirectly (through the temperature dependence of C). Indeed, for insulators and narrow-gap semiconductors, the heat capacity is dominated at low temperatures by the T3 dependence of the lattice contribution. This makes possible extremely low values of C rendering these materials particularly attractive for microcalorimeters. In contrast, the Fermi gas contribution from Thermistor-Based Calorimeters The first and most well-developed version of the micro-calorimeter uses a neutron-transmutation-doped CP680, Application of Accelerators in Research and Industry: 17th Int'l. Conference, edited by J. L. Duggan and I. L. Morgan © 2003 American Institute of Physics 0-7354-0149-7/03/$20.00 56 ture is considerably more difficult than the NTD thermistor based ones. A further advantage of using a TES sensor is that the faster response time effectively allows larger heat capacity absorbers to be used without sacrificing energy resolution. the conduction electrons in metals is problematic in some calorimeter designs. The choice of size and material for the absorber is dependent on the desired resolution and on the thermal properties of the absorber material. If the statistical fluctuations are not to dominate at, for example, the 1 eV level, then an operating temperature of 50 mK would imply a heat capacity of 4 64 106 eV/K or 7 4 10 13 J/K. While small, these heat capacities are obtainable in insulators and narrow-gap semiconductors. HgTe is a zero-gap semiconductor and one of the best-studied absorber materials in the context of x-ray detection. Insulators suffer by comparison in that some of the deposited energy can be trapped in non-thermal modes (for example electron-hole pairs) which can lead to pulse-height defects. A key advantage of the thermistor-based microcalorimeter is that it is able to take advantage of the expertise in micro-machining and doping of silicon that is available from the semiconductor industry. The signal in such a calorimeter is characterized by rapid rise in temperature followed by an exponential falloff that has a time constant equal to C/G. This time scale may be on the order of 10 ms or more, depending on the details of the design. This timescale limits the acceptable count rate for thermistor based micro-calorimeters to 1 Hz or less to avoid significant pile-up problems. Implantation Implantation has great promise in the improvement of the measurements discussed in the next section. The uniform distribution and direct coupling between the radioactive atoms of interest and the absorber that is possible with implantation should greatly improve the reliability and resolution of the experiments. To date, implantation has not been very widely used with microcalorimeters. The complexity of the cryogenic microcalorimetric techniques has been difficult enough during its development stage to make implantation seem an impracticable extra. With more RNB facilities on-line and coming on-line and with a more mature calorimeter technology, combining the two techniques is more attractive and feasible. MICRO-CALORIMETER APPLICATIONS Transition-Edge-Sensor-Based Micro-calorimeters We turn now to past and present applications of these two versions of these detectors. The second variety of micro-calorimeter uses a superconducting film to determine the energy deposited. The film is operated in the middle of the transition between the normal and superconducting state. Since the transition can be quite sharp, this type of detector has a high sensitivity. Furthermore, if it is operated under conditions of Extreme Electrothermal Feedback (ETF)[3] it can have an effective time constant that is much shorter than the C/G time scale mentioned above. In ETF, the superconducting film is voltage biased until the Joule heating exactly balances heat transfer to the heat sink. When energy is deposited in the absorber, the temperature rises, the resistance increases, and the Joule heating decreases. By monitoring the current at a given bias voltage, the total reduction in energy supplied by Joule heating can be measured. This energy is equal to the energy deposited in the absorber. This method involves a faster response time and is not limited to resolutions implied by Equation(1) because the mechanism is not governed by lattice conduction to the reservoir. Count rates of 100-500 Hz have been achieved with these Transition Edge Sensor (TES) based calorimeters detecting x-rays, but their manufac- Neutrino Masses Neutrinos have long been assumed to be massless or nearly massless. Great attention has been focused in the last few decades on experimental determinations of their mass. This attention has grown more intense with the recent evidence for a nonzero mass difference between at least two flavors of neutrinos[4]. The absolute scale of any neutrino mass has yet to be determined, though direct measurements have produced the bound mν e 3 eV/c2 [5]. Micro-calorimeters are one technology that has the potential for pushing this bound below 1 eV. Micro-calorimeters have been used in several ways to look for massive neutrinos. All make use of the advantage these detectors have over the usual spectroscopic techniques. In these applications, micro-calorimeters use completely contained radioactive sources, allowing the total decay energy (less the energy carried away by the neutrino) to be measured. This is in contrast to most other techniques in which involve separate source and detector. In separate source/detector experiments, the energy of 57 the outgoing electron is affected by the final atomic state the source atom or molecule happens to be left in. For useful limits to be placed on eV scale neutrino masses, these final state effects in the source must be determined to at least the eV scale as well. Searches for mν e Q-value for the decay, and Ei is the excitation energy released after the capture of the electron. This technique is only sensitive if the neutrino mass is close to the Q-value. 163 Ho has the lowest Q-value electron capture at 2.5 keV. Experiments reported on in 1998 [9] demonstrated proof-of-principle, but were limited by an inhomogeneous sample. Implantation or alloying would greatly improve uniformity and provide a feasible mass measurement. 0 in β decay The shape of the spectrum in β decay is different if mν e 0 than if the neutrino is massless. Searching for this shape difference has been a primary means of investigating neutrino mass issues and has largely been done using magnetic spectrometers of various types. An early calorimetric measurement of mν e was made during the search for the 17 keV neutrino. 107 Pd was enclosed in an absorber and attached to a NTD thermistor [6]. This was one of the first cryogenic measurements that did not support the 0.8% branch of a 17 keV neutrino. A 3 H experiment which uses TES based sensors has had some preliminary data taken[7]. This experiment used tritium implanted in copper foil. Unfortunately, problems with the TES producing apparatus stalled the work and the 187 Re eperiment below shows more promise statistically due to the lower endpoint energy of 187 Re. 187 Re is the experiment that has produced the tightest limits to date[8]on mν e . Due to the high natural abundance of 187 Re (62.6%) and its long lifetime (4 12 1010 yr)this experiment requires a sample of about 1.5 mg and implantation would be of no benefit. This experiment is poised to play a part in pushing the limits on mν e below 1 eV. Searches for mνe Other Observables Besides mν e and mνe , the calorimetric methods are well suited to measuring other beta decay observables in low energy systems. Q-values determined calorimetrically for 163 Ho[9],187 Re[10], and 107 Pd[6] have all made significant improvements (by factors of 5-30) over previous values. This is, again, due primarily to the lack of atomic final state effects which usually complicate these low energy measurements. Another observation has been the first detection in 187 Re of a unique effect due to the presence of the surrounding crystal. This effect arises when the outgoing electron interferes with its reflection from the surrounding crystal lattice. This changes the decay rate in a way that is periodic with the outgoing electron’s momentum [11]. Other Effects in Electron Capture 7 Be is the lightest nucleus that decays via electron cap- ture, with a maximum energy release (excluding the energy of the emitted neutrino) of 112 eV. This is divided between the nuclear recoil of the daughter nucleus and the energy release, in the form of x-rays or Auger electrons, due to the rearrangement of the atomic shells. Due to this very small energy release, the properties of the decay have been very difficult to study and the L/K ratio has never been accurately measured. Using a NTD based cryogenic micro-calorimeter with an energy resolution of 8.5 eV FWHM and an threshold of about 20 eV, we have been able to separate the different features of the decay energy spectrum, leading to the first direct exploration of the L/K ratio in 7 Be [1]. The 7 Be was produced with the TWINSOL [12] secondary radioactive beam facility at the University of Notre Dame. A 100 particle-nA beam of 6 Li at 15 MeV was incident on a 2.54 cm long gas cell filled with one atmosphere of 3 He, producing 7 Be via the 3 He(6 Li,7 Be)d reaction. Recoil 7 Be ions at a central energy of 8.5 MeV were brought to a focus 5.5 m downstream of the 3 He cell by two superconducting solenoids. A target holder 0 in electron-capture decays While much emphasis has been placed on mν e searches in β decays, the electron capture (EC) process is sensitive to certain ranges of mνe . This sensitivity comes about from the fact that the electron capture rate depends on the energy released in the decay and that energy depends (due to differences in atomic electron binding energy) on which atomic shell the electron was captured from. In general the capture rate from shell i is λi K βi2 Bi QEC Ei QEC Ei 2 m2ν (2) where λi is the EC rate from atomic shell i, K contains nuclear matrix elements and weak interaction strengths, β is the value of the electron wavefunction at the nucleus, Bi takes into account exchange effects and the imperfect overlap of initial and final atomic states, QEC is the 58 electron capture of the parent atom residing in a lattice have had great success in quantitatively describing the change in lifetime of 7 Be when it is implanted in a host lattice [15]. (A correct treatment of this effect is quite important since it affects the determination of the nuclear matrix elements used in describing the fusion reactions in the sun and therefore the rate of neutrino production.) Subsequent calculations of this "in-medium" effect on the L/K ratio [16] predicts a value of about 0.052 for the L/K ratio of 7 Be implanted in HgTe, in much better agreement with our measured value. PROSPECTS AND CONCLUSIONS These results are but a sampling of the work that is being done with cryogenic micro-calorimeters to study low-energy nuclear phenomena and represents only the beginning of their possible applications. At the present time they are limited more by a lack of widespread awareness of their capabilities and lack of imaginative use than by any technical hurdles. FIGURE 2. Energy spectrum from 7 Be electron capture decay. The smooth curve is the combined fit with individual contributions to the fit shown below it. The peaks labeled K-Gnd and L-Gnd correspond to captures from the K- or L-shell, respectively, to the ground state of the 7 Li nucleus. The regions labeled K-Ex and L-Ex correspond to captures to the first excited state of the 7 Li nucleus. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Supported in part by the National Science Foundation and Wittenberg University. REFERENCES with four small samples of HgTe (0.5 mm 1 mm 8 µ m) mounted on it was placed at the focus. After implanting for 44 hours, the estimated activity of each chip was about 5 decays per second. The HgTe chips were cleaved to a size with an activity of 1 Bq in order to reduce pileup effects. The chips were then epoxied onto NTD thermistors. The calorimeter detectors were calibrated using an external, α -excited fluorescence source with a Teflon target which provided carbon and fluorine K x-rays at 277 eV and 677 eV respectively. A spectrum of the 7 Be decay is shown in Figure 2. The non-zero slowing time of the 7 Li recoils and the lifetime of their nuclear excited state give rise to a broad distribution of energies for decays to the first nuclear excited state of 7 Li. Our experimental value [0.040(5)] [1] for the L/K ratio is a factor of about 2 lower than the average existing theoretical predictions (0.09-0.11) [13, 14] for free beryllium. This disagreement is not unexpected due to the environment of the beryllium atoms when they undergo electron capture. 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