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Ultra-Heavy Dark Matter Search with Electron Microscopy of Geological Quartz

POSTER

Abstract

Despite ever-improving sensitivities, the simplest dark matter candidate particles have not been observed, motivating searches for a wider range of possible dark sectors. Self-interactions within the dark sector could clump dark matter into heavy composite states with low number density, leading to a highly suppressed event rate for existing direct detection experiments. The large interaction cross section of such ultra-heavy dark matter results in a distinctive and compelling signature: long, straight damage tracks as the composite dark matter passes through, and continuously scatters off, the surrounding matter. We propose using geologically old quartz samples as detectors for ultra-heavy dark matter. The advantage of this search strategy is two-fold: the age of the sample provides a large exposure time, and thus compensates for the ultra-heavy dark matter's low number density; and the unique geometry of the damage track serves as a high-fidelity background rejection tool. In our work, we describe a high-resolution robust readout method based on electron microscopy, characterize the most favorable geological samples for this approach, and study its reach in a simple model of the dark sector.

Presenters

  • Reza Ebadi

    University of Maryland, College Park

Authors

  • Reza Ebadi

    University of Maryland, College Park

  • Anubhav Mathur

    Johns Hopkins University

  • Erwin Tanin

    Johns Hopkins University

  • Mason C Marshall

    University of Maryland, College Park

  • Aakash Ravi

    Harvard University, University of Maryland, College Park

  • Raisa Trubko

    Worcester Polytechnic Institute

  • Nicholas Tailby

    American Museum of Natural History

  • Roger Fu

    Harvard University

  • David F Phillips

    Harvard - Smithsonian Center for Astroph, Harvard - Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics

  • Surjeet Rajendran

    John Hopkins Krieger School of Arts and Sciences, Johns Hopkins University

  • Ronald L Walsworth

    University of Maryland, College Park