The crystal is made of either silicon or germanium. This is the same material from which transistors and solar cells are made. The sensors employ state-of-the-art.

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The crystal is made of either silicon or germanium. This is the same material from which transistors and solar cells are made. The sensors employ state-of-the-art superconducting technology fabricated in a manner similar to computer chips. The sensors on the crystal surface give two sets of signals each time a particle interacts with the crystal: [1]Vibration: An array of tiny sensors on one side detect vibrations in the crystal produced by an incoming particle. A tiny vibration in a crystal is called a “phonon”. [2]Charge: A metal grid on the other side collects electronic charge which was displaced within the crystal by the incoming particle. The detectors are assembled into “towers”. One tower has 6 detectors. The towers are inserted into the “icebox”, which is really much colder than ice! In fact, the detectors work best at only 0.02 degrees above absolute zero, the temperature where all random thermal motion stops. DARK MATTER: One of the greatest mysteries in the history of cosmology! Cosmic rays are blocked by the earth above the experiment. WIMP C RYOGENIC D ARK M ATTER S EARCH: DETECTING WIMPs IN THE CDMS EXPERIMENT Most recent picture of fridge. CDMS currently operates a complementary experiment at Stanford University at the Stanford Underground Facility. It has produced the strongest limits yet on WIMP interactions with matter. But, operating in Soudan will dramatically increase our sensitivity! photons (light) Stray Electrons Neutrons, which look just like WIMPs to our detectors. CDMS II Experiment Most of the mass of the Universe is unidentified. The CDMS Experiment hopes to change that… UNDERSTANDING THE DETECTOR SIGNALS: HOW TO IDENTIFY A WIMP! Scientists now recognize that the universe is teeming with an unidentified form of matter. This invisible matter is thought to consist of particles which are distributed throughout the universe. In fact, these dark matter particles constitute most of the mass of the universe. GALAXIES ARE MOSTLY DARK MATTER CLOUDS: Over the evolution of the Universe, the dark matter particles formed structures, like water vapor forms clouds. These massive collections of dark matter particles became the galaxies. In fact, the gravitational force of dark matter helps hold galaxies together. The stars and interstellar dust are just icing on the cake! How do we hope to see WIMPs? Since the earth and our Sun are in a galaxy, and we know that our galaxy like all others is full of dark matter particles, then some of those particles must be going through our earth -- through you and through everything. Yes, even through our detectors in the deep Soudan mine! WIMPs, A NAME FOR DARK MATTER: We know that dark matter particles generate gravity, but they interact very weakly otherwise. In our conception they are weakly-interacting, but massive particles. We call them WIMPs for short. Why are we operating in the mine? We know WIMPS aren’t stopped by the dirt and rock of the earth (they go right through it). But, the earth above our experiment in the mine blocks cosmic rays and their by-products. So we go underground to “hide” from the cosmic rays! Our detectors should still see WIMPs, but the data won’t be muddied with cosmic ray effects. The main point: A WIMP (dark matter particle) should produce a vibration signal when it bumps into an atomic nucleus in the detector crystal, but it should NOT produce a significant electronic charge signal since WIMPs themselves have no electronic charge interaction Our unique “ZIP” detectors each consist of a crystal “hockey puck” and some sensors attached to it. The crystal receives energy from incoming particles. The sensors give us information about how the particles interact with the crystal. YOU ARE HERE, IN THE THE MILKY WAY GALAXY AND YOU ARE SURROUNDED BY DARK MATTER Close-up of the array of sensors which detect vibrations in the crystal caused by an incoming particle The CDMS collaboration enjoys the participation of a diverse group of scientists from many institutions: Brown University, Case Western Reserve University, Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, National Institute of Standards and Technology, Santa Clara University, Stanford University, University of California at Berkeley, University of California at Santa Barbara, University of Colorado at Denver, University of Minnesota Amount of electronic charge displaced in the detector (Events to the right displaced more charge while the events on the left displaced less) Pulse rise-time (corresponds to the depth in the detector at which the event occurred) What do these dots show? The different colored dots (see figure below) represent different types of particles which interacted with one of our detectors. The purple dots are photons (which are just individual bits of light), the green dots represent stray electrons (called “beta rays”) and the red dots were produced by neutrons. Each of these particles interacts with our detectors in a different way. What does this mean? It shows that we can distinguish among different particles by how much electronic charge they knock loose in the detector crystal. The good news: WIMPs should behave very much like neutrons (the red dots). They displace very little charge in the crystal. If we can identify neutrons, this means that we can also tell which signals are produced by WIMPs! In Soudan there should be almost no neutrons around since we are deep underground. So, anything which looks like a neutron is likely to be a WIMP! Fridge (blue can) connects to icebox through hole in shield (partially constructed, at left) x WIMPs pass right on through the earth since they interact so weakly. But, our detectors must therefore be super-sensitive to detect them! The Icebox, in which our towers of detectors are positioned. Some background particles generated by Earth’s natural radioactivity Shielding: Even though the experiment is shielded from cosmic rays by the dirt, we surround our detectors with plenty of shielding (lead and polyethylene) to keep out background particles which, by chance, still happen to make it to our experiment. Some are produced by the natural radioactivity of the earth itself (like radon in your homes). Veto: We surround the shielding with scintillators which detect light produced by the few remaining cosmic ray particles which make it through the dirt overhead. This is necessary because these cosmic ray particles can produce neutrons, which look like WIMPs in our detectors. Connects to fridge here