An apparatus for detecting ultralight dark matter with cryogenic Fabry-Perot resonators
ORAL
Abstract
A signature of scalar virialized ultralight fields (VULFs), a promising class of dark matter candidates, is the induction of oscillatory strains in solids as a result of temporal oscillations of the Bohr radius at their Compton frequency arising from their coupling to standard model fields. Here we report on the development of a cryogenic apparatus which exploits this effect for a broadband VULF search based on differential measurements of frequency shifts in two ultra-stable optical cavities designed to respond differently to the presence of a VULF field. The first one, with its mirrors connected by a rigid spacer, will experience length oscillations. The second one consists of two mirrors decoupled from each other and from the surroundings through a mechanical suspension which suppresses VULF-induced strains. This experiment is expected to improve current bounds on VULF couplings by an estimated two orders of magnitude in a range within the audio 0.1-10 kHz bandwidth (10-13-10-11 eV/c2).
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Presenters
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Andra M Ionescu
Northwestern University
Authors
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Andra M Ionescu
Northwestern University
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Tejas Deshpande
Northwestern University
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Nicholas A Miller
Northwestern University
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Timothy Kovachy
Northwestern University
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Gerald Gabrielse
Northwestern University
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Andrew A Geraci
Northwestern University