Current Status of the SALER Experiment at FRIB

ORAL

Abstract

The Superconducting Array for Low Energy Radiation (SALER) is a new experiment in the ReA3 Hall at the Facility for Rare Isotope Beams (FRIB). SALER aims to measure the low-energy nuclear recoil spectrum of embedded short-lived radioisotopes using a superconducting tunnel junction (STJ) sensor array at ~30 mK to perform a wide range of BSM physics searches including fundamental tests of the weak interaction. In March 2024, we took delivery of the cryostat, electronics, and 32 of the eventual 128 STJ detectors at FRIB. In this talk, we present on the current status of the acceptance testing and initial offline characterization of SALER at FRIB using a 137Cs source. We will also discuss the development of a fiber-coupled UV laser feedthrough for calibration and progress towards integration with existing systems at FRIB.

*This work is supported by the DOE-SC Office of Nuclear Physics under award DE-SC0023450, the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation (10.37807/GBMF11571), and the Facility for Rare Isotope Beams.

Presenters

  • Andrew Marino

    • Colorado School of Mines

Authors

  • Andrew Marino

    • Colorado School of Mines
  • Kyle G Leach

    • Colorado School of Mines
  • Leendert M Hayen

    • LPC Caen
  • Caitlyn Jade Stone-Whitehead

    • Colorado School of Mines
  • Connor Bray

    • Colorado School of Mines
  • Adrian M Yearby

    • Michigan State University
  • Joseph Smolsky

    • MIT Laboratory for Nuclear Science
  • Benjamin Waters

    • Colorado School of Mines
  • Abigail Gillespie

    • Colorado School of Mines
  • Mohamad Kanafani

    • LPC Caen
  • Stephan Friedrich

    • Lawrence Livermore Natl Lab
  • Robin H Cantor

    • STAR Cryoelectronics