Two of the outstanding open questions in physics are the nature of dark matter and the fundamental nature of neutrinos. DARWIN is a next-generation experiment aiming to reach a dark matter sensitivity limited by the irreducible neutrino backgrounds. The core of the detector will have a 40 ton liquid xenon target operated as a dual-phase time projection chamber. The unprecedented large xenon mass, the exquisitely low radioactive background and the low energy threshold will allow for a diversification of the physics program beyond the search for dark matter particles: DARWIN will be a true low-background, low-threshold astroparticle physics observatory. I will present the status of the project, its science reach, and discuss the main R&D topics.
The CUPID-Mo experiment, currently taking data at the Laboratoire Souterrain de Modane (France), is a demonstrator for CUPID, the next-generation upgrade of the first ton-scale cryogenic 0νββ-search, CUORE. The experiment is searching for 0νββ decay of 100Mo with an array of 20 enriched ~0.2 kg Li2MoO4 crystals. The detectors are operated deep under the Frejus mountain at a depth of 4800 m.w.e. in a dilution refrigerator at ~20 mK. They are complemented by cryogenic Ge light detectors allowing us to distinguish alpha from beta/gamma events by the detection of both heat and scintillation light signals. With a bolometric performance of ~ 7 keV energy resolution (FWHM) at 2615 keV, full alpha-to-beta/gamma separation and excellent radio-purity levels, we operate in the background free regime. For the present analysis, we consider more than one year of data acquired between March 2019 and April 2020. With 2.17 kg x yr of exposure and a high analysis efficiency of ~ 90%, we are able to set a new world leading limit for 0νββ decay of 100Mo. In this seminar, I will present the details of the analysis, the new limit of T1/2 > 1.4 x 1024 yr at 90% c.i. and I will conclude with an outlook on the data taken up to the end of CUPID-Mo operations in July 2020 and further upcoming analyses.
SNO+ is a multi-purpose, low background liquid scintillator detector located in the SNOLAB facility. This talk will present our progress towards the main goal of SNO+: probing the mass and nature of neutrinos through a search for neutrino less double beta decay. By loading large amounts of natural tellurium into a homogeneous liquid scintillator detector SNO+ is pioneering an affordable and extendable approach to this rare decay search with the isotope 130Te. I will also discuss other physics reach of SNO+ including reactor, solar and supernova neutrinos and invisible nucleon decay. I will present the results for previous water phase operations and the current status of scintillator filling, tellurium plant preparation and background studies.