
SNO+ is a multipurpose neutrino experiment located approximately 2 km underground in SNOLAB, Sudbury, Canada. It started taking physics data in May 2017 and is currently completing its first phase, as a pure water Cherenkov detector. One physics goal of this water phase is to detect reactor antineutrinos for the first time using a pure water target. A key component of this search is the identification of the 2.2 MeV γ \gamma from the inverse beta decay neutron capturing on hydrogen. The low trigger threshold of the SNO+ detector allows for a substantial detection efficiency of these neutrons, as observed with a deployed 241 ^{241} Am9 ^9 Be source. This poster presents the recent effort on the AmBe calibration and an analysis of the obtained coincident pairs of 4.4 MeV and 2.2 MeV γ \gamma s in the SNO+ detector.
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