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EOS: a demonstrator of hybrid optical detector technology
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EOS is a technology demonstrator, designed to explore the capabilities of hybrid event detection technology, leveraging both Cherenkov and scintillation light simultaneously. With a fiducial mass of four tons, EOS is designed to operate in a high-precision regime, with sufficient size to utilize time-of-flight information for full event reconstruction, flexibility to demonstrate a range of cutting edge technologies, and simplicity of design to facilitate potential future deployment at alternative sites. Results from EOS can inform the design of future neutrino detectors for both fundamental physics and nonproliferation applications.
Forward citations
Cited by 4 Pith papers
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First Demonstration of a Hybrid Cherenkov and Scintillation Detector in a Proof-of-Principle Axion Search at a Beam Dump
First event-by-event Cherenkov separation from sub-MeV electrons in liquid argon enables a proof-of-principle ALP search excluding new parameter space despite no observed excess.
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Probing Long-Lived Particle Production in Muon Decays at the SNS with a Highly Capable Hydrocarbon Detector
Proposes a hydrocarbon detector at SNS for order-of-magnitude better sensitivity to 10-100 MeV axion-like particles and heavy neutral leptons via e+e- decays from muon decays at rest.
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Performance of the Eos detector with water
First calibration results from the Eos four-tonne water Cherenkov detector validate simulations and reconstruction methods using deployed optical and radioactive sources.
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Neutrino monitoring of explosions for excluding fission yield
Calculations indicate ton- to tens-of-kiloton inverse-beta-decay detectors can set useful fission-yield limits for chemical explosions up to 100 km at the Nevada National Security Site but are unsuitable for longer ra...
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