Ortho-positronium observation in the Double Chooz experiment
2014
The Double Chooz experiment measures the neutrino mixing angle θ13 by detecting
reactor ¯νe via inverse beta decay. The positron-neutron space and time coincidence
allows for a sizable background rejection, nonetheless liquid scintillator detectors would
profit from a positron/electron discrimination, if feasible in large detector, to suppress the
remaining background. Standard particle identification, based on particle dependent time
profile of photon emission in liquid scintillator, can not be used given the identical mass of
the two particles. However, the positron annihilation is sometimes delayed by the orthopositronium
(o-Ps) metastable state formation, which induces a pulse shape distortion that
could be used for positron identification. In this paper we report on the first observation of
positronium formation in a large liquid scintillator detector based on pulse shape analysis
of single events. The o-Ps formation fraction and its lifetime were measured, finding the
values of 44 % ± 12 % (sys.) ± 5 % (stat.) and 3.68 ns ± 0.17 ns (sys.) ± 0.15 ns (stat.)
respectively, in agreement with the results obtained with a dedicated positron annihilation
lifetime spectroscopy setup.
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