M

M. Alfonsi

Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz

Publishes on Particle physics theoretical and experimental studies, Dark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena, Particle Detector Development and Performance. 103 papers and 12.5k citations.

103Publications
12.5kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Dark Matter Search Results from a One Ton-Year Exposure of XENON1T
E. Aprile, J. Aalbers, F. Agostini et al.|Physical Review Letters|2018
Cited by 1.9kOpen Access

We report on a search for weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPs) using 278.8 days of data collected with the XENON1T experiment at LNGS. XENON1T utilizes a liquid xenon time projection chamber with a fiducial mass of (1.30±0.01) ton, resulting in a 1.0 ton yr exposure. The energy region of interest, [1.4,10.6] keV_{ee} ([4.9,40.9] keV_{nr}), exhibits an ultralow electron recoil background rate of [82_{-3}^{+5}(syst)±3(stat)] events/(ton yr keV_{ee}). No significant excess over background is found, and a profile likelihood analysis parametrized in spatial and energy dimensions excludes new parameter space for the WIMP-nucleon spin-independent elastic scatter cross section for WIMP masses above 6 GeV/c^{2}, with a minimum of 4.1×10^{-47} cm^{2} at 30 GeV/c^{2} and a 90% confidence level.

Dark Matter Results from 225 Live Days of XENON100 Data
E. Aprile, M. Alfonsi, K. Arisaka et al.|Physical Review Letters|2012
Cited by 1.4kOpen Access

We report on a search for particle dark matter with the XENON100 experiment, operated at the Laboratori Nazionali del Gran Sasso for 13 months during 2011 and 2012. XENON100 features an ultralow electromagnetic background of $(5.3\ifmmode\pm\else\textpm\fi{}0.6)\ifmmode\times\else\texttimes\fi{}{10}^{\ensuremath{-}3}\text{ }\text{ }\mathrm{events}/({\mathrm{keV}}_{\mathrm{ee}}\ifmmode\times\else\texttimes\fi{}\mathrm{kg}\ifmmode\times\else\texttimes\fi{}\mathrm{day})$ in the energy region of interest. A blind analysis of $224.6\text{ }\mathrm{\text{live days}}\ifmmode\times\else\texttimes\fi{}34\text{ }\text{ }\mathrm{kg}$ exposure has yielded no evidence for dark matter interactions. The two candidate events observed in the predefined nuclear recoil energy range of $6.6--30.5\text{ }\text{ }{\mathrm{keV}}_{\mathrm{nr}}$ are consistent with the background expectation of ($1.0\ifmmode\pm\else\textpm\fi{}0.2$) events. A profile likelihood analysis using a $6.6--43.3\text{ }\text{ }{\mathrm{keV}}_{\mathrm{nr}}$ energy range sets the most stringent limit on the spin-independent elastic weakly interacting massive particle--nucleon scattering cross section for weakly interacting massive particle masses above $8\text{ }\text{ }\mathrm{GeV}/{c}^{2}$, with a minimum of $2\ifmmode\times\else\texttimes\fi{}{10}^{\ensuremath{-}45}\text{ }\text{ }{\mathrm{cm}}^{2}$ at $55\text{ }\text{ }\mathrm{GeV}/{c}^{2}$ and 90% confidence level.

First Dark Matter Search Results from the XENON1T Experiment
E. Aprile, J. Aalbers, F. Agostini et al.|Physical Review Letters|2017
Cited by 879Open Access

We report the first dark matter search results from XENON1T, a ∼2000-kg-target-mass dual-phase (liquid-gas) xenon time projection chamber in operation at the Laboratori Nazionali del Gran Sasso in Italy and the first ton-scale detector of this kind. The blinded search used 34.2 live days of data acquired between November 2016 and January 2017. Inside the (1042±12)-kg fiducial mass and in the [5,40] keV_{nr} energy range of interest for weakly interacting massive particle (WIMP) dark matter searches, the electronic recoil background was (1.93±0.25)×10^{-4} events/(kg×day×keV_{ee}), the lowest ever achieved in such a dark matter detector. A profile likelihood analysis shows that the data are consistent with the background-only hypothesis. We derive the most stringent exclusion limits on the spin-independent WIMP-nucleon interaction cross section for WIMP masses above 10 GeV/c^{2}, with a minimum of 7.7×10^{-47} cm^{2} for 35-GeV/c^{2} WIMPs at 90% C.L.

Light Dark Matter Search with Ionization Signals in XENON1T
E. Aprile, J. Aalbers, F. Agostini et al.|Physical Review Letters|2019
Cited by 527Open Access

We report constraints on light dark matter (DM) models using ionization signals in the XENON1T experiment. We mitigate backgrounds with strong event selections, rather than requiring a scintillation signal, leaving an effective exposure of (22±3) tonne day. Above ∼0.4 keV_{ee}, we observe <1 event/(tonne day keV_{ee}), which is more than 1000 times lower than in similar searches with other detectors. Despite observing a higher rate at lower energies, no DM or CEvNS detection may be claimed because we cannot model all of our backgrounds. We thus exclude new regions in the parameter spaces for DM-nucleus scattering for DM masses m_{χ} within 3-6 GeV/c^{2}, DM-electron scattering for m_{χ}>30 MeV/c^{2}, and absorption of dark photons and axionlike particles for m_{χ} within 0.186-1 keV/c^{2}.

DARWIN: towards the ultimate dark matter detector
Aalbers, J., J. Aalbers, F. Agostini et al.|Zurich Open Repository and Archive (University of Zurich)|2016
Cited by 506Open Access

DARk matter WImp search with liquid xenoN (DARWIN) will be an experiment for the direct detection of dark matter using a multi-ton liquid xenon time projection chamber at its core. Its primary goal will be to explore the experimentally accessible parameter space for Weakly Interacting Massive Particles (WIMPs) in a wide mass-range, until neutrino interactions with the target become an irreducible background. The prompt scintillation light and the charge signals induced by particle interactions in the xenon will be observed by VUV sensitive, ultra-low background photosensors. Besides its excellent sensitivity to WIMPs above a mass of 5 GeV/c2, such a detector with its large mass, low-energy threshold and ultra-low background level will also be sensitive to other rare interactions. It will search for solar axions, galactic axion-like particles and the neutrinoless double-beta decay of 136-Xe, as well as measure the low-energy solar neutrino flux with &lt;1% precision, observe coherent neutrino-nucleus interactions, and detect galactic supernovae. We present the concept of the DARWIN detector and discuss its physics reach, the main sources of backgrounds and the ongoing detector design and R&amp;D efforts.