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No X-Rays shining through a wall: A search for heavy, axion-like particles with a Free Electron Laser

ORAL

Abstract

The axion was posed as a solution to the CP problem of QCD, but axion-like particles (ALPs) also arise in string theory and are a dark matter (DM) candidate. Most laboratory axion searches have concentrated on the 0.001-0.1 meV mass range however there is growing interest in heavier (DFSZ) axions above 10 meV which avoid the cosmological domain wall catastrophe [1].

We describe a new search for axions at EuXFEL Hamburg, sensitive to a mass range including 1 meV-1 eV, which is largely unconstrained by laboratory experiments. Our experiment exploits the Primakoff effect, via which (in the presence of strong external fields) photons can decay into axions and then reconvert back into photons. This has previously been employed in experiments with lasers and external magnetic fields; however using X-rays it is possible to increase the detection sensitivity by using the electric field present within a crystalline material. X-Ray searches were previously performed at a 3rd generation synchrotron [2]; however limited flux prevented probing down to DM relevant couplings. Our work is a first step in developing a platform with improved sensitivity thanks to an increase in brightness by ~1010 at EuXFEL. Initial work has confirmed previous bounds on the coupling strength and probed a previously unexplored mass range. In future we hope to probe down to a coupling relevant to QCD axions in the keV mass range.

[1] K. Beyer & S. Sarkar SciPost Phys. 15 (2023) 003

[2] T. Yamaji et al., Phys. Lett. B 782 (2018) 523

Presenters

  • Jack W Halliday

    University of Oxford, Imperial College London

Authors

  • Jack W Halliday

    University of Oxford, Imperial College London

  • Giacomo Marocco

    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

  • Charlie Heaton

    University of Oxford

  • Motoaki Nakatsutsumi

    European XFEL

  • Charles D Arrowsmith

    University of Oxford

  • Carsten Baehtz

    European XFEL GmbH, Holzkoppel

  • Konstantin Beyer

    Max-Planck-Institut für Kernphysik: Startseite

  • Robert Bingham

    University of Strathclyde

  • Sebastian Goede

    European XFEL

  • Oliver Humphries

    European XFEL

  • Alejandro Laso Garcia

    Helmholtz Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf

  • Richard Plackett

    University of Oxford

  • Thomas Preston

    European XFEL

  • Ian Peter J Shipsey

    University of Oxford

  • Pontus E Svensson

    University of Oxford

  • Georgios Vacalis

    University of Oxford

  • Daniel Wood

    University of Oxford

  • Ulf Zastrau

    European XFEL

  • Subir Sarkar

    University of Oxford

  • Gianluca Gregori

    University of Oxford