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The CYGNO experiment: a gaseous TPC with optical readout for rare events searches

Published 23 Mar 2026 in physics.ins-det and hep-ex | (2603.22595v1)

Abstract: The CYGNO collaboration is developing a novel strategy for directional Dark Matter searches based on a gaseous Time Projection Chamber (TPC). The detector is optimized for the exploration of light (0.5-50 GeV) WIMPs-like particles and employs a He/CF4 gas mixture at atmospheric pressure, sensitive to both spin-dependent and spin-independent interactions. A key feature of the project is its optical readout, which relies on photon detection rather than charge collection. In CYGNO detectors, electrons released by ionizing tracks drift toward an amplification stage of three Gas Electron Multipliers (GEMs). The electron avalanches generate scintillation light that is captured by scientific CMOS (sCMOS) cameras for high-resolution two-dimensional imaging and by Photomultiplier Tubes (PMTs) that provide a precise time profile along the drift direction. This allows a 3D event reconstruction, detailed energy deposition mapping, and effective topology and head-to-tail discrimination. Building on the achievements of the 50 L prototype (LIME), which successfully operated underground at LNGS, the next step is the deployment of a 0.4 m3 demonstrator, CYGNO-04, to be completed in 2026. The demonstrator will validate scalability and confirm the advantages of the proposed technique. Recent results from LIME highlight strong progress in 3D tracking and particle identification. The current status of CYGNO-04 and its role in advancing the program will be presented as well.

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