Optical calibration of the SNO+ detector in the water phase with deployed sources

Journal of Instrumentation IOP Publishing 16 (2021) P10021

Authors:

Mr Anderson, S Andringa, M Askins, Dj Auty, F Barão, N Barros, R Bayes, Ew Beier, A Bialek, Sd Biller, E Blucher, M Boulay, E Caden, Ej Callaghan, J Caravaca, M Chen, O Chkvorets, B Cleveland, D Cookman, J Corning, Ma Cox, C Deluce, Mm Depatie, F Di Lodovico, J Dittmer, E Falk, N Fatemighomi, V Fischer, R Ford, K Frankiewicz, A Gaur, K Gilje, Oi González-Reina, D Gooding, C Grant, J Grove, Al Hallin, D Hallman, J Hartnell, Wj Heintzelman, Rl Helmer, J Hu, R Hunt-Stokes, Sma Hussain, As Inácio, Cj Jillings, T Kaptanoglu, P Khaghani, Armin Reichold

Abstract:

SNO+ is a large-scale liquid scintillator experiment with the primary goal of searching for neutrinoless double beta decay, and is located approximately 2 km underground in SNOLAB, Sudbury, Canada. The detector acquired data for two years as a pure water Cherenkov detector, starting in May 2017. During this period, the optical properties of the detector were measured in situ using a deployed light diffusing sphere, with the goal of improving the detector model and the energy response systematic uncertainties. The measured parameters included the water attenuation coefficients, effective attenuation coefficients for the acrylic vessel, and the angular response of the photomultiplier tubes and their surrounding light concentrators, all across different wavelengths. The calibrated detector model was validated using a deployed tagged gamma source, which showed a 0.6% variation in energy scale across the primary target volume.

The LSST-DESC 3x2pt Tomography Optimization Challenge

The Open Journal of Astrophysics The Open Journal 4:1 (2021)

Authors:

Joe Zuntz, François Lanusse, Alex I Malz, Angus H Wright, Anže Slosar, Bela Abolfathi, David Alonso, Abby Bault, Clécio R Bom, Massimo Brescia, Adam Broussard, Jean-Eric Campagne, Stefano Cavuoti, Eduardo S Cypriano, Bernardo MO Fraga, Eric Gawiser, Elizabeth J Gonzalez, Dylan Green, Peter Hatfield, Kartheik Iyer, David Kirkby, Andrina Nicola, Erfan Nourbakhsh, Gabriel Teixeira, Katrin Heitmann

The Simons Observatory: Constraining inflationary gravitational waves with multi-tracer B-mode delensing

(2021)

Authors:

Toshiya Namikawa, Anton Baleato Lizancos, Naomi Robertson, Blake D Sherwin, Anthony Challinor, David Alonso, Susanna Azzoni, Carlo Baccigalupi, Erminia Calabrese, Julien Carron, Yuji Chinone, Jens Chluba, Gabriele Coppi, Josquin Errard, Giulio Fabbian, Simone Ferraro, Alba Kalaja, Antony Lewis, Mathew S Madhavacheril, P Daniel Meerburg, Joel Meyers, Federico Nati, Giorgio Orlando, Davide Poletti, Giuseppe Puglisi, Mathieu Remazeilles, Neelima Sehgal, Osamu Tajima, Grant Teply, Alexander van Engelen, Edward J Wollack, Zhilei Xu, Byeonghee Yu, Ningfeng Zhu, Andrea Zonca

Accurate Baryon Acoustic Oscillations reconstruction via semi-discrete optimal transport

(2021)

Authors:

Sebastian VON HAUSEGGER, Bruno Lévy, Roya Mohayaee

The search for living worlds and the connection to our cosmic origins

Experimental Astronomy Springer 54:2-3 (2021) 1275-1306

Authors:

Ma Barstow, S Aigrain, Jk Barstow, M Barthelemy, B Biller, A Bonanos, L Buchhave, Sl Casewell, C Charbonnel, S Charlot, R Davies, N Devaney, C Evans, M Ferrari, L Fossati, B Gansicke, M Garcia, de Castro AI Gomez, T Henning, C Lintott, C Knigge, C Neiner, L Rossi, C Snodgrass, D Stam, E Tolstoy, M Tosi

Abstract:

One of the most exciting scientific challenges is to detect Earth-like planets in the habitable zones of other stars in the galaxy and search for evidence of life. During the past 20 years the detection of exoplanets, orbiting stars beyond our own, has moved from science fiction to science fact. From the first handful of gas giants, found through radial velocity studies, detection techniques have increased in sensitivity, finding smaller planets and diverse multi-planet systems. Through enhanced ground-based spectroscopic observations, transit detection techniques and the enormous productivity of the Kepler space mission, the number of confirmed planets has increased to more than 2000. Several space missions, including TESS (NASA), now operational, and PLATO (ESA), will extend the parameter space for exoplanet discovery towards the regime of rocky Earth-like planets and take the census of such bodies in the neighbourhood of the Solar System. The ability to observe and characterise dozens of potentially rocky Earth-like planets now lies within the realm of possibility due to rapid advances in key space and imaging technologies and active studies of potential missions have been underway for a number of years. The latest of these is the Large UV Optical IR space telescope (LUVOIR), one of four flagship mission studies commissioned by NASA in support of the 2020 US Decadal Survey. LUVOIR, if selected, will be of interest to a wide scientific community and will be the only telescope capable of searching for and characterizing a sufficient number of exo-Earths to provide a meaningful answer to the question “Are we alone?”. This contribution is a White Paper that has been submitted in response to the ESA Voyage 2050 Call.