3rd Joint Meeting of the APS Division of Nuclear Physics and the Physical Society of Japan 
Volume 54, Number 10
Tuesday–Saturday, October 13–17, 2009;
Waikoloa, Hawaii
Session 2WD: Workshop on Neutrinoless Double Beta Decay II
2:00 PM–5:30 PM, 
Tuesday, October 13, 2009
Room: Kohala 2
Chair: Alan Poon, LBNL
Abstract ID: BAPS.2009.HAW.2WD.5
Abstract: 2WD.00005 : Status of the DCBA Experiment
4:00 PM–4:30 PM
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  Abstract  
Author:
Nobuhiro Ishihara
(KEK)
Momentum analyzers called DCBA (Drift Chamber Beta-ray Analyzer) are being 
developed at KEK in order to study neutrinoless double-beta decay. DCBA 
consists of drift chambers interleaving thin decay-source plates and a 
solenoid magnet serving a uniform magnetic field. The momentum of individual 
beta-ray is measured from the helical track reconstructed in three 
dimension. Then its kinetic energy is calculable. As for backgrounds, pair 
creation events are easily rejected by electric charges in the magnetic 
field. Alpha particles have so large momenta that they don't make helical 
tracks. Since the vertex point of a double beta-decay event is clearly 
identified, a single electron track is easily eliminated, and double Compton 
scatterings are also identified. A prototype called DCBA-T2 had been 
operated, and the energy resolution of about 150 keV (FWHM) was obtained for 
976 keV electrons, which were the internal conversion electrons from Bi-207. 
The DCBA-T2 has been in engineering run using natural Mo plates of 45 mg/cm2 
thickness to check comprehensive capabilities. New prototype DCBA-T3 is now 
under construction to improve the energy resolution and to increase the 
source amount accommodated in drift chambers. The main different points from 
DCBA-T2 are the pitches of signal wires, which are changed from 6 mm to 3 
mm, and the strength of magnetic field, which is done from 0.8 kG to 3 kG 
maximum. In order to improve the energy resolution with the reduction of the 
multiple scattering of electron in chamber gas, a stronger magnetic field is 
produced by a super-conducting solenoid. It makes the helical track radius 
smaller, and then smaller pitches of signal wires are required to obtain 
enough sampling point data on the helical track. A detector module 
temporarily named Magnetic Tracking Detector (MTD) has been designed on the 
basis of DCBA in order to search for Majorana neutrino mass down to 50 meV. 
Status of DCBA-T2 and T3 will be presented together with the future project 
of MTD.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2009.HAW.2WD.5