Construction of the next phase, XENON1T, started in Hall B of the
Gran Sasso National Laboratory in 2014. The detector contains 3.2 tons of ultra radio-pure liquid xenon, and has a fiducial volume of about 2 tons. The detector is housed in a 10 m water tank that serves as a muon veto. The TPC is 1 m in diameter and 1 m in height. The detector project team, called the XENON Collaboration, is composed of 135 investigators across 22 institutions from Europe, the Middle East, and the United States. The first results from XENON1T were released by the XENON collaboration on May 18, 2017, based on 34 days of data-taking between November 2016 and January 2017. While no WIMPs or dark matter candidate signals were officially detected, the team did announce a record low reduction in the background radioactivity levels being picked up by XENON1T. The exclusion limits exceeded the previous best limits set by the
LUX experiment, with an exclusion of cross sections larger than for WIMP masses of . Because some signals that the detector receives might be due to neutrons, reducing the radioactivity increases the sensitivity to
WIMPs. In September 2018 the XENON1T experiment published its results from 278.8 days of collected data. A new record limit for WIMP-nucleon spin-independent elastic interactions was set, with a minimum of at a WIMP mass of . In April 2019, based on measurements performed with the XENON1T detector, the XENON Collaboration reported in
Nature the first direct observation of two-neutrino
double electron capture in xenon-124 nuclei. The measured half-life of this process, which is several orders of magnitude larger than the age of the Universe, demonstrates the capabilities of xenon-based detectors to search for rare events and showcases the broad physics reach of even larger next-generation experiments. This measurement represents a first step in the search for the
neutrinoless double electron capture process, the detection of which would provide insight into the nature of the
neutrino and allow to determine its absolute mass. As of 2019, the XENON1T experiment has stopped data-taking to allow for construction of the next phase, XENONnT. with a statistical significance of 3.5σ. Three explanations were considered: existence of to-date-hypothetical solar
axions, a surprisingly large
magnetic moment for neutrinos, and tritium contamination in the detector. Multiple other explanations were given later by others groups and in 2021 an interpretation of the results not as dark matter particles but of as
dark energy particles candidates called
chameleons has also been discussed. In July 2022 a new analysis by XENONnT discarded the excess. ==XENONnT==