91̽»¨

Skip to main content
Department Of Physics text logo
  • Research
    • Our research
    • Our research groups
    • Our research in action
    • Research funding 91̽»¨
    • Summer internships for undergraduates
  • Study
    • Undergraduates
    • Postgraduates
  • Engage
    • For alumni
    • For business
    • For schools
    • For the public
  • Support
91̽»¨
Insertion of STC into TRT at the Department of Physics, 91̽»¨
Credit: CERN

Dr Kevin Thieme

Postdoctoral Research Assistant

Research theme

  • Particle astrophysics & cosmology

Sub department

  • Particle Physics

Research groups

  • LUX-ZEPLIN
kevin.thieme@physics.ox.ac.uk
Denys Wilkinson Building, room 504A
  • About
  • CV
  • Publications

Mehrteilige Lagervorrichtung und Stützsegment

(2022)

Authors:

Kevin THIEME, Frédéric Girard

GPU-based optical simulation of the DARWIN detector

Journal of Instrumentation IOP Publishing 17:07 (2022) p07018

Authors:

L Althueser, B Antunović, E Aprile, D Bajpai, L Baudis, D Baur, AL Baxter, L Bellagamba, R Biondi, Y Biondi, A Bismark, A Brown, R Budnik, A Chauvin, AP Colijn, JJ Cuenca-García, V D'Andrea, P Di Gangi, J Dierle, S Diglio, M Doerenkamp, K Eitel, S Farrell, AD Ferella, C Ferrari, C Findley, H Fischer, M Galloway, F Girard, R Glade-Beucke, L Grandi, M Guida, S Hansmann-Menzemer, F Jörg, L Jones, P Kavrigin, LM Krauss, B von Krosigk, F Kuger, H Landsman, RF Lang, S Li, S Liang, M Lindner, J Loizeau, F Lombardi, T Marrodán Undagoitia, J Masbou, E Masson, J Matias-Lopes, S Milutinovic, CMB Monteiro, M Murra, K Ni, U Oberlack, I Ostrovskiy, M Pandurovic, R Peres, J Qin, M Rajado Silva, D Ramírez García, P Sanchez-Lucas, JMF dos Santos, M Schumann, M Selvi, F Semeria, H Simgen, M Steidl, P-L Tan, A Terliuk, K Thieme, R Trotta, CD Tunnell, F Tönnies, K Valerius, S Vetter, G Volta, W Wang, C Wittweg, Y Xing

A measurement of the mean electronic excitation energy of liquid xenon

The European Physical Journal C SpringerOpen 81:12 (2021) 1060

Authors:

Laura Baudis, Patricia Sanchez-Lucas, Kevin Thieme

Abstract:

Liquid xenon is a leader in rare-event physics searches. Accurate modeling of charge and light production is key for simulating signals and backgrounds in this medium. The signal- and background-production models in the Noble Element Simulation Technique (NEST) are presented. NEST is a simulation toolkit based on experimental data, fit using simple, empirical formulae for the average charge and light yields and their variations. NEST also simulates the final scintillation pulses and exhibits the correct energy resolution as a function of the particle type, the energy, and the electric fields. After vetting of NEST against raw data, with several specific examples pulled from XENON, ZEPLIN, LUX/LZ, and PandaX, we interpolate and extrapolate its models to draw new conclusions on the properties of future detectors (e.g., XLZD's), in terms of the best possible discrimination of electron(ic) recoil backgrounds from a potential nuclear recoil signal, especially WIMP dark matter. We discover that the oft-quoted value of 99.5% discrimination is overly conservative, demonstrating that another order of magnitude improvement (99.95% discrimination) can be achieved with a high photon detection efficiency (g1 ~ 15-20%) at reasonably achievable drift fields of 200-350 V/cm.Comment: 24 Pages, 6 Tables, 15 Figures, and 15 Equation

Design and construction of Xenoscope — a full-scale vertical demonstrator for the DARWIN observatory

Journal of Instrumentation IOP Publishing 16:08 (2021) P08052-P08052

Authors:

L Baudis, Y Biondi, M Galloway, F Girard, A Manfredini, N McFadden, R Peres, P Sanchez-Lucas, K Thieme

Abstract:

Abstract The DARWIN observatory is a proposed next-generation experiment to search for particle dark matter and other rare interactions. It will operate a 50 t liquid xenon detector, with 40 t in the time projection chamber (TPC). To inform the final detector design and technical choices, a series of technological questions must first be addressed. Here we describe a full-scale demonstrator in the vertical dimension, Xenoscope, with the main goal of achieving electron drift over a 2.6 m distance, which is the scale of the DARWIN TPC. We have designed and constructed the facility infrastructure, including the cryostat, cryogenic and purification systems, the xenon storage and recuperation system, as well as the slow control system. We have also designed a xenon purity monitor and the TPC, with the fabrication of the former nearly complete. In a first commissioning run of the facility without an inner detector, we demonstrated the nominal operational reach of Xenoscope and benchmarked the components of the cryogenic and slow control systems, demonstrating reliable and continuous operation of all subsystems over 40 days. The infrastructure is thus ready for the integration of the purity monitor, followed by the TPC. Further applications of the facility include R&D on the high voltage feedthrough for DARWIN, measurements of electron cloud diffusion, as well as measurements of optical properties of liquid xenon. In the future, Xenoscope will be available as a test platform for the DARWIN collaboration to characterise new detector technologies.

DARWIN – a next-generation liquid xenon observatory for dark matter and neutrino physics

Proceedings of 37th International Cosmic Ray Conference — PoS(ICRC2021) Sissa Medialab (2021) 548-548

Pagination

  • First page First
  • Previous page Prev
  • Page 1
  • Page 2
  • Page 3
  • Page 4
  • Current page 5
  • Page 6
  • Next page Next
  • Last page Last

Footer 91̽»¨

  • Contact us
  • Giving to the Dept of Physics
  • Work with us
  • Media

User account menu

  • Log in

Follow us

FIND US

Clarendon Laboratory,

Parks Road,

91̽»¨,

OX1 3PU

CONTACT US

Tel: +44(0)1865272200

Department Of Physics text logo

© 91̽»¨ - Department of Physics

Cookies | Privacy policy | Accessibility statement

  • Home
  • Research
  • Study
  • Engage
  • Our people
  • News & Comment
  • Events
  • Our facilities & services
  • About us
  • Giving to Physics