2. The Achievable Sensitivity in Time-Varying DM Signal
The origin of the DM annual and diurnal modulation signatures and their peculiar features is due to the Earth motion with respect to the DM particles constituting the Galactic dark halo [
6,
7]. During its motion, a laboratory on the Earth experiences a wind of DM particles, which are trapped in the gravitational field of the Galaxy with a peculiar phase-space distribution function. Many possibilities for the distribution function have been proposed in the literature [
8,
9,
10,
11,
12,
13,
14,
15,
16,
17,
18,
19,
20,
21,
22,
23,
24]; many of them profit from new astrophysical observations and new simulations. The DM annual modulation is due to the Earth’s revolution around the Sun, which is moving towards Vega (near the constellation of Hercules) in the Local Standard of Rest (LSR) frame of the Galaxy. In particular, a larger flux of DM particles crosses the Earth around ≃2 June, while a smaller one does around ≃2 December. On the contrary, the DM diurnal modulation is due to the rotation of the Earth around its axis.
The DM annual and diurnal modulation signatures are very distinctive. As regards the DM annual modulation signature, the DM signal must simultaneously satisfy all the following requirements (see for example [
1,
25]): the rate has to contain a modulation component as a cosine function with a period of one year and a phase that provides the maximum of the signal around ≃2 June. The DM annual modulation is to be found only at low energy, where events induced by DM particles can be present, and can produce events where only one detector module of many actually ”fires” (single-hit events), since the probability that DM particles interact with more than one detector module is negligible. There is also a constraint on the DM annual modulation amplitude: it is
(see later and e.g., [
1,
25]) of the constant part of the signal in the region of maximal sensitivity for the halo distribution function usually adopted; however, in the literature, some scenarios have been also proposed in which a larger amplitude is expected [
26,
27,
28,
29,
30]. Thus the DM annual modulation signature does not depend on the nature of the DM particle, has many requirements (as fore-mentioned) and allows a wide range of parameters to be tested in many possible astrophysical, nuclear and particle physics scenarios (see e.g., [
1]). Similar considerations can be done for the DM diurnal modulation. In this case, the behavior of the counting rate during the sidereal day must follow a well-defined pattern depending on the location of the detector in the Earth.To explain the DM annual and diurnal modulation signatures, the motion of a detector placed in a laboratory on the Earth surface is described in the Galactic frame. Thus, an observer fixed in it sees the detector moving due both to the rotation of the Earth around its axis and to the revolution of the Earth around the Sun.
The velocity of such a detector can be written as [
31]:
where
is the velocity of the LSR due to the rotation of the Galaxy;
is the peculiar velocity of the Sun with respect to the LSR;
is the velocity of the Earth due to its revolution around the Sun and
is the velocity of the Earth due to the rotation around its axis at the coordinates (latitude and longitude) of the laboratory. In the Galactic coordinate frame (defined as
x axis pointing towards the Galactic center,
y axis following the Galaxy rotation and the
z axis pointing towards the Galactic North pole), we can write
, where
km/s [
32,
33,
34,
35] (uncertainty at 90% confidence level (C.L.)), and
km/s [
36]. The Earth velocities due to the revolution and rotation depend on the sidereal time,
t.
The orbital speed of the Earth depends weakly on the time because of the ellipticity of the Earth orbital motion around the Sun; in fact, varies in the range between 29.3 km/s and 30.3 km/s. Hence, here it is assumed constant and equal to its mean value ≃29.8 km/s.
The rotational speed of the Earth, is given by , where is the latitude of the considered laboratory and is the equatorial rotational speed equal to 0.4655 km/s. As an example, km/s at Gran Sasso underground Laboratory (LNGS), where 27 N and longitude 34 E.
The expected counting rate in many detectors for DM investigations depends on the detector’s speed in the Galaxy,
. The time-independent contribution is
km/s. A Taylor expansion, performed in the smaller time-dependent contributions
km/s and
km/s, allows to determine—at the first order expansion—the detector’s speed in the Galaxy [
31]:
where
, confirms that the ecliptic is tilted with respect to the Galactic plane of ≃60
, and
(calculated for
km/s) are “geometrical” factors [
31]. The angular velocities are
and
, where
sidereal year and
sidereal day. The two phases,
and
, correspond to the time when the annual and diurnal modulations are maximum. The phase of the DM annual modulation is
, where
is the spring equinox time (≈21 March). The second term in the previous equation has been calculated for
km/s and it ranges from 71.76 solar days (for
km/s) to 74.20 solar days (for
km/s). For
km/s it corresponds to
2 June [
31]. The phase of the DM diurnal modulation corresponds to
h local sidereal time and
km/s; actually this value ranges from 13.94 h (
km/s) to 14.07 h (
km/s) [
31].
Finally, the expected signal counting rate in a given
k-th energy bin can be written, applying a Taylor expansion, as:
For simplicity, we omit higher order terms with no time dependence and higher harmonics of
and
. The first term of Equation (
3) is the constant part of the signal (
), while the other two terms are the annual modulation one with amplitude
, and the diurnal modulation one with amplitude
.
It is worth to note that the ratio
of the DM diurnal modulation amplitude over the DM annual modulation amplitude is a model-independent constant; it is energy independent being a function of the latitude of the experiment and its order of magnitude is given by the ratio between the rotational speed of the Earth and the orbital speed of the Earth (≃
):
At the LNGS latitude one has:
The data analysis exploiting the DM annual and diurnal modulation signatures are based on the study of the measured counting rate as a function of time. The initial approach [
6,
7], that was considered for the DM annual modulation signature, was introduced considering experiments of small masses, high background and poor exposure. Over time the method was extended, in particular, by the DAMA collaboration [
37,
38,
39]. Generally speaking, we can write the time-dependence of the expected signal counting rate in a given
k-th energy bin as:
where
is a periodic function with period
T; without loosing generality, we assume that
and
. For the two particular cases we are dealing with here,
and
, respectively, and in turn
and
. In
Section 4 the example of the directionality approach using the ZnWO
anisotropic scintillators will be addressed in the light of the sensitivity discussed here; in such a case
is a more complex function with the daily periodicity achievable for example by simulations. Therefore, the
are the amplitudes of the studied process.
To get the highest sensitivity, the energy bin
in the differential energy distribution must be chosen as the best compromise between a sufficient statistics and a good signal-to-background ratio. When the statistics is low, it requires to integrate the events in rather large energy intervals at the expense of the reachable sensitivity. When a large exposure is instead available, the events can be binned on the basis of the arrival time (
i index), involved detector module (
j index) and energy intervals of width
(
k index):
. Each element of
follows a Poisson distribution with expected value:
The contribution of background in the
k-th energy interval for the
j-th detector module is
, the time interval in which the detector was active on the
i-th time bin is
, the total efficiency in the
k-th energy interval for the
j-th detector module is
, and the mass of the
j-th detector module is
. Let us define
=
. One can consider the following variables–the sum run over a single period
T–built from the number of counts,
(omitting for simplicity the indexes
):
where:
In the particular case of “coupled” time bins (i.e., opposite in phase), one obtains , and in case of a complete period T of measurement . The D and X variables are stochastic ones since they are function of ; the latter follows a poissonian distribution with . These variables can allow interesting studies on the free parameters: the modulation amplitude, , and the time-independent term, . In fact, in case the variance of the cosine, , is for a detector being operational evenly throughout the period T, the expectation values of D and X are and . In the general case, they are and (For completeness, another stochastic variable can be used to decouple the two equations: , whose expectation value is directly connected to : .). Moreover, the variances are: and (in the latter we omit the terms negligible when a detector is operational evenly throughout the period T).
In conclusion, the modulation amplitude,
, can be worked out by
and considering the
as the best estimators of
(that is
) one has:
To estimate the statistical significance of the presence of modulation one can evaluate the standard deviation associated to the
. As a first approximation without losing generality, we can replace in Equation (
14)
with
:
After some algebraic calculations using Equations (
10)–(
12):
Therefore, the obtained sensitivity, defined as
, for observing periodical modulation amplitude is directly proportional to the square root of the generalized exposure (i.e.,
) and inversely proportional to the square root of the mean rate (i.e.,
). Finally, considering that for a full period
T of exposure
and
, one can write:
Of course, when the DM signal contains two or more with very different frequencies, as it is the case of annual and diurnal modulations, all these contributions can be treated as independent and all the above considerations still hold separately for each contribution.
In the following, as examples, we consider the cases of the DM annual and diurnal modulation results reported by the DAMA experiments. Only for illustrative purpose, we consider that
cpd/kg/keV. The exposure, as defined in Equation (
10), is
. Typical values of the DAMA experiments are:
and 5 keV, because the DM annual modulation is observed in the (1–6) keV (DAMA/LIBRA–phase2) and (2–6) keV (DAMA/NaI and DAMA/LIBRA–phase1) energy intervals; and the average efficiency is
. For the DM annual modulation study the total exposure of DAMA/NaI, DAMA/LIBRA–phase1 and phase2 is
tons × year [
1,
40,
41], where
is the total exposed mass and
is the time of data acquisition; thus the expected error on
is:
Other published results on annual modulation with solid scintillators were recently reported by COSINE-100 [
42] and by ANAIS [
43]. As deeply argued e.g., in [
1] these results have no impact on the observed DAMA annual modulation result, as briefly summarized here. For example, considering the exposures (0.098 and 0.158 tons × year, respectively), the counting rates in the low energy region (3.0 cpd/kg/keV in the 2–6 keV energy region for COSINE-100 and 3.2 (3.6) cpd/kg/keV in the 2–6 (1–6) keV energy region for ANAIS) and the related efficiencies (≃
(0.65) in the 2–6 (1–6) keV energy region in either cases), for those experiments, we can estimate by using Equation (
18)
cpd/kg/keV for COSINE-100 and
cpd/kg/keV in the 2–6 (1–6) keV energy region for ANAIS, respectively. These values are about one order of magnitude larger than those obtained by DAMA, confirming the fact that these experiments are still far from reaching the sensitivity of DAMA. Let us note that the energy intervals in kinetic recoiling energy are not the same, as briefly discussed later.
For the DM diurnal modulation study the exposure of DAMA/LIBRA–phase1 has been considered to date [
31]:
tons × year and, then:
The values of Equations (
19) and (
20) will be compared with those obtained by the analyses summarized in the following. Finally, it can be noted that an enhancement of the sensitivity for the DM signal by pursuing the annual and/or diurnal modulation signatures can be obtained not only by increasing the exposure and by decreasing the background rate of the experiments, but also by increasing the average efficiency and by extending the data analysis to lower the energy threshold. In particular, the latter point is important both because it means increasing the
in the denominator of Equation (
18) and because the un-modulated part of the DM signal is expected to have a steep increase at low energy.
3. Practical Examples of Reached Sensitivities: The Case of the DAMA/LIBRA Annual and Diurnal Investigations
The model-independent DM annual and diurnal modulation signatures will be considered in more details in the light of the results of DAMA/LIBRA (see e.g., [
1] and references therein) and of the former DAMA/NaI (see e.g., [
38,
39] and references therein) experiments. These experiments developed highly radio-pure NaI(Tl) target-detectors that ensure sensitivity to a wide range of DM candidates, interaction types and astrophysical scenarios [
1].
The DAMA/LIBRA experiment, located deep underground at the Gran Sasso National Laboratory, is composed of about 250 kg highly radio-pure NaI(Tl). At the end of 2010 all the photomultipliers (PMTs) of the set-up were replaced by new Hamamatsu R6233MOD PMTs, having higher quantum efficiency (Q.E.) and lower background with respect to those previously used [
44]. The commissioning of this phase of the experiment (DAMA/LIBRA–phase2) was successfully performed in 2011, achieving the software energy threshold at 1 keV (while it was 2 keV for the first phase, DAMA/LIBRA–phase1), and the improvement of some detector’s features [
44]. Along with the data taking, within each annual cycle, all the procedures have been the same. The energy calibrations are regularly carried out in the same running condition down to a few keV with X-rays/
sources. In particular, the study of the double coincidences (summing the data over long periods) due to internal X-rays from
K (at ppt levels in the crystals) allows to calibrate the detectors at 3.2 keV, i.e., rather near to the energy threshold considered for the data analysis. The light response of the detector modules in DAMA/LIBRA-phase2 is from 6 to 10 photoelectrons/keV, depending on the detector module. The overall efficiency as a function of the energy for single-hit events is reported in [
44]. In the experiment both single-hit events (where just one of the detector modules fires) either multiple-hit events (where more than one detector module fires) with energy up to a few MeV have been recorded.
In [
1,
40,
41,
45] the details of the annual cycles of DAMA/LIBRA–phase2 are reported. The available full annual cycles of DAMA/LIBRA–phase2 are six (exposure of 1.13 tons × year); when also considering the former DAMA/NaI and DAMA/LIBRA–phase1, the cumulative exposure is 2.46 tons × year [
1,
40,
41].
To point out the presence of annual modulation of the single-hit events at low energy, the residual counting rate as a function of the time has been investigated. The time of measurement is discretized in various time intervals, and each experimental point is calculated from the raw rate of the single-hit scintillation events after subtracting the un-modulated part. In
Figure 1 the obtained residual rates for single-hit events for DAMA/LIBRA–phase1 and DAMA/LIBRA–phase2 are shown The energy interval is from the software energy threshold of DAMA/LIBRA–phase1 (2 keV), up to 6 keV. The null hypothesis, that is the absence of modulation, is rejected at very high C.L. by
test:
/degrees-of-freedom (d.o.f.) = 199.3/102, corresponding to
p-value = 2.9 × 10
.
Other analyses are reported in Refs. [
1,
40,
41,
45]. The single-hit residual rates shown in
Figure 1 and those of DAMA/NaI have been fitted with the function:
, considering a period
year and a phase
day (2 June) as expected by the DM annual modulation signature. The obtained
/d.o.f. is equal to 113.8/138 and a modulation amplitude
cpd/kg/keV is obtained [
1,
40,
41,
45]. When the period and the phase are kept free in the fitting procedure, the achieved C.L. for the full exposure (2.46 tons × year) is 12.9
; the modulation amplitude of the single-hit scintillation events is:
cpd/kg/keV, the measured phase is
days and the measured period is
year, all these values are well in agreement with those expected for DM particles. The reached confidence level is 12.9
[
1,
40,
41,
45].
Let us note that the errors of the measured modulation amplitudes are well in agreement with those achievable using the theoretical expectation of Equations (
17) and (
19):
.
The absence of any significant background modulation has been verified in energy regions not of interest for DM [
1,
40,
41,
45]. These analyses account for any kind of background. No fake events able to reproduce the DM annual modulation signature (that is able to simultaneously satisfy all the peculiarities of the signature and to account for the measured modulation amplitude) are available; for details also see the discussions e.g., in [
1] and references therein.
The above mentioned COSINE-100 [
42] and by ANAIS [
43] experiments reported modulation amplitudes in the (2–6) keV energy interval compatible with zero and with the DAMA results:
cpd/kg/keV [
42] and
cpd/kg/keV [
43], respectively. The errors of these measurements are in agreement with those estimated in
Section 2, where this lack of needed sensitivity was already been pointed out. Moreover, let us note that the comparison is done in the same energy interval in keV electron equivalent (keVee). This does not correspond to the same interval in terms of kinetic energy, since the quenching factors of nuclear recoils are not the same. See discussions in [
1].
Another approach to study the annual modulation is based on the use of the maximum likelihood method to obtain from the residual rate the modulation amplitudes, , as a function of the energy, considering year and day. The likelihood function of the single-hit events in the k-th energy bin can be written as: . Hence, by minimizing for each energy bin the logarithm of the likelihood function (the index k is omitted for simplicity): , the free parameters of the fit ( and ) can be obtained.
Figure 2 reports the modulation amplitudes for DAMA/NaI, DAMA/LIBRA–phase1 and DAMA/LIBRA–phase2. The total exposure is 2.46 tons × year. The data points below 2 keV are only due to DAMA/LIBRA–phase2 (exposure of 1.13 tons × year). A clear modulation signal is evident in the (1–6) keV energy interval, while the
are compatible with zero above 6 keV. This analysis confirms the previous ones. The hypothesis that
values in the (6–14) keV energy interval have random fluctuations around zero can be tested by a
analysis: the
is equal to 19.0 for 16 d.o.f. (upper tail probability of 27%). For the case of (6–20) keV energy interval, the
/d.o.f. is 42.6/28 (upper tail probability of 4%). The
value is rather large mainly due to two data points, far away from the (1–6) keV energy interval, at 16.75 and 18.25 keV. Excluding only the first and either the points the
p-values are 11% and 25%, respectively.
Many other consistency checks have been done; for details see [
1] and references therein.
No modulation has been found in any possible source of systematics or side reactions; thus, cautious upper limits on possible contributions to the DAMA/LIBRA measured modulation amplitude have been obtained (see e.g., [
1] and references therein). Similar analyses have also been performed for the DAMA/NaI data [
38,
39]. No systematic effects or side reactions able to account for the whole observed modulation amplitude and to simultaneously satisfy all the requirements of the exploited DM signature have been found. A detailed discussion about all the related arguments can be found in [
1] and references therein.
The long-standing annual-modulation evidence measured in DAMA experiments is model-independent, i.e., without any a priori assumption of theoretical interpretations of the identity of DM, of the specifics of its interactions, of dark halo features. It is compatible with a wide set of scenarios regarding the nature of the DM candidate and related astrophysical, nuclear and particle physics [
1] (and references therein). In particular, discussions about comparisons with other activities can be found e.g., in [
1,
25] and references therein.
The DAMA/LIBRA–phase1 data have also been analyzed in terms of the DM diurnal modulation signature due to the Earth’s diurnal rotation around its axis [
31]. As shown in Equation (
5), the interest in this signature is also because the ratio
of the DM diurnal modulation amplitude over the DM annual modulation amplitude is a model-independent constant at a given latitude whose value at the LNGS latitude is 0.016.
Figure 3 shows the time and energy behaviour of the experimental residual rates of single-hit events both as a function of solar (left) and of sidereal (right) time, in the (2–6) keV energy interval. The used time bin is 1 h (either solar or sidereal, respectively). The null hypothesis (absence of diurnal variation in the residual rate) has been tested by a
test, obtaining the (2–6) keV energy interval
/d.o.f.
and
for the solar and sidereal time, respectively [
31]. The upper tail probabilities (
p-values), calculated by the standard
distribution, are 36% and 63%, respectively [
31]. Thus, no diurnal variation with a significance of 95 % C.L. is found. In addition to the
test, an independent statistical test, the runs test [
46], has been applied: it verifies the hypothesis that the positive and negative data points are randomly distributed. The lower tail probabilities are equal to: 7% and 78% in the (2–6) keV energy interval for the two cases. Thus, in conclusion, the presence of any significant diurnal variation and of time structures can be excluded at the reached level of sensitivity and upper limits on the diurnal modulation amplitudes can be derived.
The residual rates of the single-hit events as a function of the sidereal time (see
Figure 3 right) have been fitted with a cosine function with amplitude
as free parameter, period fixed at 24 h and phase at 14 h. The obtained diurnal modulation amplitude is compatible with zero:
cpd/kg/keV (
/d.o.f.
, and
p = 61%) [
31]. Following the Feldman-Cousins procedure [
47], the upper limit on the diurnal modulation amplitude can be worked out:
cpd/kg/keV (90% C.L.) [
31].
The single-hit residual rate of DAMA/LIBRA–phase1 as function of the sidereal time has been fitted with the formula
; the period is fixed at 24 h and the phase at 14 h, as expected for the DM diurnal effect. The obtained diurnal modulation amplitudes,
, as functions of energy with 1 keV energy bin are reported in
Figure 4.
The
values are compatible with zero and show random fluctuations around zero with
equal to 19.5 for 18 degrees of freedom. Moreover, as in the case of DM annual modulation results, the errors of the measured DM diurnal modulation amplitudes are well in agreement with those achievable using the theoretical expectation of Equations (
17) and (
20):
.
Finally, taking into account
and the DM annual modulation effect pointed out by DAMA/LIBRA for the single-hit events in the low energy region, the expected value of the DM diurnal modulation amplitude for the (2–6) keV energy interval is
cpd/kg/keV. Thus, the effect of DM diurnal modulation, expected because of the Earth diurnal motion on the basis of the DAMA DM annual modulation results, is out the sensitivity of DAMA/LIBRA–phase1 [
31]. DAMA/LIBRA–phase2, presently running, with a lower software energy threshold [
44] can also offer the possibility to increase sensitivity to such an effect.
4. Example of Reachable Sensitivities for ZnWO Anisotropic Detectors to Measure DM Directionality
The light output and the pulse shape for heavy particles (p,
, nuclear recoils) in anisotropic scintillators depend on the direction with respect to the crystal axes. On the contrary, the response to
radiation is isotropic. This anisotropy property offers the possibility to investigate DM by the directionality approach, which is applicable to those DM candidate particles inducing nuclear recoils. The ZnWO
has unique features among the anisotropic scintillators; these make it an excellent candidate for this kind of research. Moreover, plenty of room for improvement of its performance is still present. The possibility of a low background pioneer experiment ADAMO (Anisotropic detectors for DArk Matter Observation) to exploit the directionality approach by using anisotropic ZnWO
scintillators deep underground was already discussed in [
48].
The directionality approach [
49] studies the correlation between the arrival direction of the DM particles, through the induced nuclear recoils, and the Earth motion in the galactic rest frame. In fact, the Earth experiences a wind of DM particles apparently flowing along a direction opposite to that of the solar motion relative to the DM halo. However, because of the Earth’s rotation around its axis, their average direction with respect to an observer fixed on the Earth changes during the sidereal day, as schematically shown in
Figure 5. The nuclear recoils produced after a DM scattering are expected to be strongly correlated with the impinging direction of the DM particle. Hence, the study of the nuclear recoils direction offers a powerful tool for investigating the DM in a way largely independent on the assumptions. Unfortunately, the range of recoiling nuclei is very short (of the order of a few mm in low-pressure time projection chambers and typically of the order of m in solid detectors) for practical use in possible experiments aiming at measuring recoil tracks; however, these limitations can be overcome by using anisotropic scintillation detectors.
For an anisotropic detector with the three crystallographic axes fixed in the Earth reference frame, the directions of the possible nuclear recoils induced by the DM particles are expected to be strongly correlated with the sidereal time within the day, while the background events are not. Thanks to the different light responses of ZnWO
anisotropic scintillators for nuclear recoils, we can expect that the energy distribution of the DM induced recoils depends on the direction of
, the detector’s velocity in the Galaxy, defined in Equation (
1). Thus, considering a horizontal coordinate frame located at the North pole, described by the “polar-zenith”,
, and by the “polar–azimuth”,
, angles, the counting rate is a function of the polar and azimuth angles; an example of this—whose details of the calculations are reported in [
48]—is shown in
Figure 6.
Therefore, the expected signal counting rate is a function of time, according to a time dependence as that reported in Equation (
6), being the time period of
one sidereal day. The sensitivity of the method can be approached as in the previous Sections.
In particular, the sensitivity reachable by the ADAMO project (200 kg of ZnWO
), in 5 years of data taking with a duty cycle of 70%, average efficiency of 70%, in 1 keV energy bin and for a typical background level of 0.1 cpd/kg/keV can be calculated by Equation (
18). The standard deviation
of the amplitude of the variation (here
) due to the effect searched for is
cpd/kg/keV. The typical amplitudes of the variation,
, are reported in
Figure 6, where it is
for 2 keV energy threshold, and ≃
for 6 keV energy threshold where
is the spin-independent elastic scattering cross section of the DM particle on nucleons and
is the fraction of the DM local density of the considered candidate. Hence,
pb and
pb can be obtained at
level. These values can be compared with those reported in
Figure 7, where curves of sensitivity are reported for different background levels and for a software energy thresholds of 2 keVee. In the same figure the allowed regions obtained in [
45] for the DAMA results after the first six annual cycles of DAMA/LIBRA–phase2 are also reported for comparison.
The anisotropic scintillators were suggested for the first time as detectors to study the directionality signature in the DM investigation in [
51]. At a later time, the anthracene scintillators were considered as a good possibility [
50]. However, only in 2013 the ZnWO
anisotropic scintillators were proposed [
48] (Some preliminary activities were also carried out by various authors; for details see [
48,
50,
51] and references therein). In fact, the ZnWO
is a very promising crystal for the DM directionality approach offering suitable features [
48,
52,
53,
54,
55,
56,
57,
58,
59,
60,
61].
After those papers, thanks to the promising features of ZnWO
anisotropic scintillators, the collaboration between the DAMA group of INFN and the INR-Kyiv group [
53,
54,
62,
63] has been developing several ZnWO
detectors in the last years. The first crystals were grown and produced by the Institute for Scintillation Materials (ISMA, Kharkiv, Ukraine); later on, the DAMA/INR-Kyiv groups have been profiting from a collaboration with the Nikolaev Institute of Inorganic Chemistry (Novosibirsk, Russia) to carry on an R&D for producing ultra-radiopure ZnWO
. This R&D is based on the use of the low-thermal gradient Czochralski technique in a platinum crucible; it is still ongoing [
64]. The crystals produced within these collaborations and R&D were measured in the DAMA/R&D underground facility at LNGS [
53,
54,
62,
63]. All these measurements and R&D show that the ZnWO
scintillators are competitive detectors for experiments based on the approach of the DM directionality. In particular, it has been confirmed that the light output and the time profile of the scintillation pulses for heavy particles (p,
, nuclear recoils) are dependent on the direction of such particles relative to the crystal axes. On the contrary, such dependence was not observed for
radiation [
52,
61]. In addition, the ZnWO
anisotropic scintillators have shown a pulse shape discrimination capability between
radiation and heavy particles (
). The R&D works have also shown the possibility to produce single ZnWO
crystals with masses of some kg [
64]. ZnWO
have a high atomic weight and, due to the presence of three target nuclei with very different masses (Zn, W and O), these scintillators—as also the NaI(Tl)—are sensitive to both small and large mass DM candidates.
The ZnWO
scintillators, developed in the R&D works, have shown a very good level of radio-purity; the measured upper limits are: 20 Bq/kg for the
K, in the range (0.17–1.3) Bq/kg for the
Th, and 2 Bq/kg for the
Ra [
53,
56]; further radio-purification of ZnWO
crystal scintillators is still feasible and one of the issues of the present R&D works. The measurements at LNGS confirmed that the light outputs of the crystals are relatively high at room temperature: ≃20% of the Na(Tl) scintillator and it can be further improved at low-temperature [
65]. To study this feature, a small cryostat is currently under test at LNGS; it will allow a stable working temperature around −50
C.
The anisotropy of the ZnWO
to nuclear recoils is a crucial issue for DM investigation with the directionality approach. For this purpose, specific measurements were performed by using a 7.99 g mass ZnWO
crystal scintillator of
mm
, in the framework of the ADAMO project [
48,
61]. The size of the crystal was chosen so small to avoid multiple scatterings of neutrons. The crystal was obtained by a second crystallization procedure using low-thermal gradient Czochralski technique from zinc tungstate crystals made from tungsten oxide additionally purified by double sublimation of tungsten chlorides [
61]. The crystallographic axes, identified by the producer, were experimentally verified. The crystal was irradiated with monochromatic neutrons at ENEA-CASACCIA and with
particles at LNGS [
61]. In the measurements with neutrons, the scattered neutrons were tagged by suitable neutron detectors; in such a way, the quenching factors of nuclear recoils were determined for three different neutron scattering angles (i.e., nuclear recoils energies) along the different crystallographic axes. Hence, the anisotropy of the light response for nuclear recoils in the ZnWO
crystal scintillator was determined at 5.4 standard deviations [
61].