86th Annual Meeting of the APS Southeastern Section
Volume 64, Number 19
Thursday–Saturday, November 7–9, 2019;
Wrightsville Beach, North Carolina
Session A04: Accelerator-based Dark Sector Production
8:30 AM–10:30 AM,
Thursday, November 7, 2019
Holiday Inn Resort
Room: Oceanwatch
Chair: Alexander Somov, Jefferson Laboratory
Abstract: A04.00003 : Casting light on the Dark Sector with BDX at Jefferson Lab
9:30 AM–10:00 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Marzio De Napoli
(INFN - Catania)
The Beam Dump eXperiment (BDX) is an electron-beam thick-target experiment aimed
to investigate the existence of Light Dark Matter (LDM) particles in the MeV-GeV mass
range at Jefferson Lab. The experiment has been approved by JLab PAC46
and is expected to run in a dedicated underground facility located about 20 m downstream
of the Hall A beam-dump. It will make use of a 10.6 GeV e- beam collecting up to $10^{22}$ electrons on target. The detector consists of two main components: a CsI(Tl)
electromagnetic calorimeter (Ecal) and a veto system used to reject the background.
The expected signature of the DM interaction in the Ecal is a $\sim$GeV electromagnetic
shower paired with a null activity in the surrounding active veto counters. In addition to
the veto system, a specific shielding configuration installed between the dump and the
detector will be used to suppress the high-energy component of the beam-related
background.
A proof of concept measurement has recently started at JLAB in the present unshielded
configuration. It is using a 2.2 GeV e- beam and is expected to run parasitically for 1
year. The compact detector used, called BDX-MINI, is made by a PbWO4
electromagnetic calorimeter, surrounded by a layer of tungsten shielding and two
hermetic plastic scintillator veto systems. It was lowered in a well, dug downstream
HALL A at the location of the proposed BDX facility, and positioned 8 m underground at
the beam height.
This talk will present an overview of the BDX experiment and a focus on the
description of the current measurement and its preliminary results. This early stage
experiment represents the first dedicated new-generation beam-dump experiment
whose physics reach should almost cover a parameter region measured by summing up
old not-optimized experiments.