Speaker
Description
The CYGNO project aims to develop a gaseous high-precision Time Projection Chamber with an optical readout for directional Dark Matter searches and solar neutrino spectroscopy. The innovative features of CYGNO are the use of a He-CF
DM detectors are known to be sensitive to neutrino interaction through CevNS, which represents a nearly irreducible background if no directional information is employed to handle it. Directional DM detectors, as high precision gaseous TPCs, are not only able to discriminate this background from a DM signal but even better, to promote neutrino from an inconvenience to a physics case. Directionality can indeed be exploited not only on NR induced by CEvNES but also on ER generated by the elastic scattering of O(100) keV neutrinos on the target atomic electrons.
With a TPC, it is possible to well identify the signal by reconstructing the electron direction. The angular distribution of the electron recoil will show indeed a peak in the opposite direction of the Sun (produced by neutrinos) over a flat background component. In addition, because of the low density of the gas which determines a low multiple scattering, the reconstruction of the electron direction is feasible down to an energy of few tens of keV corresponding to about 60 keV threshold on neutrino energy.
In the presentation, we will show the latest results of the CYGNO experiment, with a particular focus on the overground commissioning of the LIME prototype, with a 33x33 cm