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Hunting for Hidden Photons in the Wilderness: the Search for Non-Interacting Particles Experiment (SNIPE Hunt)

POSTER

Abstract

Recently, it was proposed that the Earth itself could act as a transducer for ultralight dark-matter detection [1]. In particular, interaction of kinetically mixed hidden-photon dark matter with the Earth and the surrounding space environment (e.g., the ionosphere) generates a characteristic coherent magnetic field signal pattern across the surface of the Earth that can be searched for using unshielded magnetometers [2]. We plan to search for signals from hidden-photon dark matter with Compton frequencies in the 0.1-100 Hz range by performing correlated measurements with a network of atomic magnetometers in relatively quiet magnetic environments (in the wilderness far from human-generated magnetic noise).

Publication: [1] M. A. Fedderke, P. W. Graham, D. F. Jackson Kimball, and S. Kalia, Phys. Rev. D 104, 075023 (2021).<br>[2] M. A. Fedderke, P. W. Graham, D. F. Jackson Kimball, and S. Kalia, Phys. Rev. D 104, 095032 (2021).

Presenters

  • Madison Forseth

    California State University - East Bay

Authors

  • Michael A Fedderke

    Johns Hopkins University

  • Saarik Kalia

    Stanford University

  • Peter Graham

    Stanford University

  • Jason E Stalnaker

    Oberlin Coll, Oberlin College

  • Ibrahim Sulai

    Bucknell University

  • Erik B Helgren

    California State University - East Bay

  • Ryan P Smith

    California State University - East Bay

  • Arran T Phipps

    California State University - East Bay

  • Madison Forseth

    California State University - East Bay

  • Andres Interiano-Alvarado

    California State University - East Bay