Vibrations from experimental setups and the environment are a persistent source of noise for low-temperature calorimeters searching for rare events, including neutrinoless double beta (0νββ) decay or dark matter interactions. Such noise can significantly limit experimental sensitivity to the physics case under investigation. Here, we report the detection of marine microseismic vibrations using mK-scale calorimeters. This study employs a multi-device analysis correlating data from CUORE, the leading experiment in the search for 0νββ decay with mK-scale calorimeters, and the Copernicus Earth Observation program, revealing the seasonal impact of Mediterranean Sea activity on CUORE’s energy thresholds, resolution, and sensitivity over four years. The detection of marine microseisms underscores the need to address faint environmental noise in ultra-sensitive experiments. Understanding how such noise couples to the detector and developing mitigation strategies is essential for next-generation experiments. We demonstrate one such strategy: a noise decorrelation algorithm implemented in CUORE using auxiliary sensors, which reduces vibrational noise and improves detector performance. Enhancing sensitivity to 0νββ decay and to rare events with low-energy signatures requires identifying unresolved noise sources, advancing noise reduction methods, and improving vibration suppression systems, all of which inform the design of next-generation rare event experiments.

Adams, D., Alduino, C., Alfonso, K., Armatol, A., Avignone, F., Azzolini, O., et al. (2026). The detection of marine microseismic activity with the CUORE tonne-scale cryogenic experiment. COMMUNICATIONS PHYSICS, 9(1), 1-21 [10.1038/s42005-025-02484-5].

The detection of marine microseismic activity with the CUORE tonne-scale cryogenic experiment

Beretta M.;Branca A.;Brofferio C.;Capelli S.;Carniti P.;Chiesa D.;Dell'Oro S.;Faverzani M.;Fiorini E.;Giachero A.;Girola M.;Gironi L.;Nastasi M.;Nucciotti A.;Pattavina L.;Pavan M.;Previtali E.;
2026

Abstract

Vibrations from experimental setups and the environment are a persistent source of noise for low-temperature calorimeters searching for rare events, including neutrinoless double beta (0νββ) decay or dark matter interactions. Such noise can significantly limit experimental sensitivity to the physics case under investigation. Here, we report the detection of marine microseismic vibrations using mK-scale calorimeters. This study employs a multi-device analysis correlating data from CUORE, the leading experiment in the search for 0νββ decay with mK-scale calorimeters, and the Copernicus Earth Observation program, revealing the seasonal impact of Mediterranean Sea activity on CUORE’s energy thresholds, resolution, and sensitivity over four years. The detection of marine microseisms underscores the need to address faint environmental noise in ultra-sensitive experiments. Understanding how such noise couples to the detector and developing mitigation strategies is essential for next-generation experiments. We demonstrate one such strategy: a noise decorrelation algorithm implemented in CUORE using auxiliary sensors, which reduces vibrational noise and improves detector performance. Enhancing sensitivity to 0νββ decay and to rare events with low-energy signatures requires identifying unresolved noise sources, advancing noise reduction methods, and improving vibration suppression systems, all of which inform the design of next-generation rare event experiments.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Low Temperature Calorimeters; Cryogenics; Noise abatement; Environmental Vibrations
English
26-feb-2026
2026
9
1
1
21
121
open
Adams, D., Alduino, C., Alfonso, K., Armatol, A., Avignone, F., Azzolini, O., et al. (2026). The detection of marine microseismic activity with the CUORE tonne-scale cryogenic experiment. COMMUNICATIONS PHYSICS, 9(1), 1-21 [10.1038/s42005-025-02484-5].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/614387
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