We examine in greater detail the recent proposal of using superconductors for detecting dark matter as light as the warm dark matter limit of O(keV). Detection of suc light dark matter is possible if the entire kinetic energy of the dark matter is extracted in the scattering, and if the experiment is sensitive to O(meV) energy depositions. This is the case for Fermi-degenerate materials in which the Fermi velocity exceeds the dark matter velocity dispersion in the Milky Way of ~10–3. We focus on a concrete experimental proposal using a superconducting target with a transition edge sensor in order to detect the small energy deposits from the dark matter scatterings. Considering a wide variety of constraints, from dark matter self-interactions to the cosmic microwave background, we show that models consistent with cosmological/astrophysical and terrestrial constraints are observable with such detectors. A wider range of viable models with dark matter mass below an MeV is available if dark matter or mediator properties (such as couplings or masses) differ at BBN epoch or in stellar interiors from those in superconductors. We also show that metal targets pay a strong in-medium suppression for kinetically mixed mediators; this suppression is alleviated with insulating targets.
Hochberg, Yonit, et al. "Detecting superlight dark matter with Fermi-degenerate materials." Journal of High Energy Physics (Online), vol. 2016, no. 8, Aug. 2016. https://doi.org/10.1007/JHEP08(2016)057
Hochberg, Yonit, Pyle, Matt, Zhao, Yue, & Zurek, Kathryn M. (2016). Detecting superlight dark matter with Fermi-degenerate materials. Journal of High Energy Physics (Online), 2016(8). https://doi.org/10.1007/JHEP08(2016)057
Hochberg, Yonit, Pyle, Matt, Zhao, Yue, et al., "Detecting superlight dark matter with Fermi-degenerate materials," Journal of High Energy Physics (Online) 2016, no. 8 (2016), https://doi.org/10.1007/JHEP08(2016)057
@article{osti_1379535,
author = {Hochberg, Yonit and Pyle, Matt and Zhao, Yue and Zurek, Kathryn M.},
title = {Detecting superlight dark matter with Fermi-degenerate materials},
annote = {We examine in greater detail the recent proposal of using superconductors for detecting dark matter as light as the warm dark matter limit of O(keV). Detection of suc light dark matter is possible if the entire kinetic energy of the dark matter is extracted in the scattering, and if the experiment is sensitive to O(meV) energy depositions. This is the case for Fermi-degenerate materials in which the Fermi velocity exceeds the dark matter velocity dispersion in the Milky Way of ~10–3. We focus on a concrete experimental proposal using a superconducting target with a transition edge sensor in order to detect the small energy deposits from the dark matter scatterings. Considering a wide variety of constraints, from dark matter self-interactions to the cosmic microwave background, we show that models consistent with cosmological/astrophysical and terrestrial constraints are observable with such detectors. A wider range of viable models with dark matter mass below an MeV is available if dark matter or mediator properties (such as couplings or masses) differ at BBN epoch or in stellar interiors from those in superconductors. We also show that metal targets pay a strong in-medium suppression for kinetically mixed mediators; this suppression is alleviated with insulating targets.},
doi = {10.1007/JHEP08(2016)057},
url = {https://www.osti.gov/biblio/1379535},
journal = {Journal of High Energy Physics (Online)},
issn = {ISSN 1029-8479},
number = {8},
volume = {2016},
place = {United States},
publisher = {Springer Berlin},
year = {2016},
month = {08}}
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