Shilo Xia headshot

Shilo Xia

Ph.D. 2020
Physics

Current Position: Assistant Professor of Physics and Astronomy

Current Institution: Purdue University

Advisor: David C. Moore

Degree Year: 2020

Dissertation Title: Search for Neutrinoless Double Beta Decay and Detector Physics Measurements with the Final EXO-200 Dataset

Dissertation Abstract: Liquid xenon (LXe) is employed in a number of current and future detectors for rare event searches. This work presents the latest results from the EXO-200 experiment, which searched for neutrinoless double beta decay (0$\nu\beta\beta$) in $^{136}$Xe between 2011 and 2018. With upgraded hardware, increased exposure and analysis improvements, the detector resolution, sensitivity and final data limit were also improved over time.

Taking advantage of a single-phase, large detector with good purity and well-calibrated energy response, measurements of the absolute scintillation and ionization yields generated by MeV energy gamma sources over a range of electric fields was performed in EXO-200 and are presented in this thesis. These measurements are useful for simulating the performance of future 0$\nu\beta\beta$ detectors employing LXe, such as nEXO, which is a next generation 0$\nu\beta\beta$ experiment using $^{136}$Xe aiming to reach a half-life sensitivity $\sim10^{28}$ years. The development of high-bandwidth digital cable prototypes with sufficiently low radioactivity for use in nEXO is described in the end.

Information updated 03/17/2026

Experiments

nEXO

Moore

Science goal: Search for neutrinoless double beta decay, which could answer why we live in a Universe of matter, not antimatter.

WL involvement: Yale is leading efforts to build the photon detectors for nEXO. Moore serves as the sub-system scientist for the photon sensors. Moore is also collaborating with LLNL and SLAC to study ways to capture xenon directly from the atmosphere.

Graduate student working on nEXO R&D setup at Wright Lab.

News

Nothing to share right now.

Please check back soon or explore our site.