COSINUS: Cryogenic Calorimeters for the Direct Dark Matter Search with NaI Crystals

COSINUS (Cryogenic Observatory for SIgnatures seen in Next-generation Underground Searches) is an experiment employing cryogenic calorimeters, dedicated to direct dark matter search in underground laboratories. Its goal is to cross-check the annual modulation signal the DAMA collaboration has been d...

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Published inJournal of low temperature physics Vol. 200; no. 5-6; pp. 428 - 436
Main Authors Angloher, G., Carniti, P., Dafinei, I., Di Marco, N., Fuss, A., Gotti, C., Mancuso, M., Martella, P., Pagnanini, L., Pessina, G., Petricca, F., Pirro, S., Pröbst, F., Reindl, F., Schäffner, K., Schieck, J., Schmiedmayer, D., Schwertner, C., Stadler, R., Stahlberg, M., Zema, V., Zhu, Y.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published New York Springer US 2020
Springer Nature B.V
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Summary:COSINUS (Cryogenic Observatory for SIgnatures seen in Next-generation Underground Searches) is an experiment employing cryogenic calorimeters, dedicated to direct dark matter search in underground laboratories. Its goal is to cross-check the annual modulation signal the DAMA collaboration has been detecting for about 20 years (Bernabei et al. in Nucl Part Phys Proc 303–305:74–79, 2018. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nuclphysbps.2019.03.015 ) and which has been ruled out by other experiments in certain dark matter scenarios. COSINUS can provide a model-independent test by the use of the same target material (NaI), with the additional chance of discriminating β / γ events from nuclear recoils on an event-by-event basis, by the application of a well-established temperature sensor technology developed within the CRESST collaboration. Each module is constituted by two detectors: the light detector, that is a silicon beaker equipped with a transition edge sensor (TES), and the phonon detector, a small cubic NaI crystal interfaced with a carrier of a harder material (e.g. CdWO 4 ), also instrumented with a TES. This technology had so far never been applied to NaI crystals because of several well-known obstacles, and COSINUS is the first experiment which succeeded in operating NaI crystals as cryogenic calorimeters. Here, we present the COSINUS project, describe the achievements and the challenges of the COSINUS prototype development and discuss the status and the perspectives of this NaI-based cryogenic frontier.
ISSN:0022-2291
1573-7357
1573-7357
DOI:10.1007/s10909-020-02464-9