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Innovative Microwave Resonators for Very High Mass Axion Dark Matter Searches

ORAL

Abstract

The most sensitive searches for axion halo dark matter are based on the resonant conversion of axions to photons within a microwave cavity permeated by a strong magnetic field. Current and future experiments such as HAYSTAC and ALPHA seeking to reach recent predictions of the post-inflation axion of masses of 40-180 μeV (~10-45 GHz) are challenged both by the rapidly diminishing volume of conventional microwave cavities with frequency (thus loss of signal power) and by the proliferation of other modes which hybridize with the mode of interest (thus loss of frequency coverage). We will present results on metamaterial-inspired resonators which can simultaneously have the requisite high frequency and large volume, and on photonic band gap structures which can trap the mode of interest (TM010) while radiating away most of the interfering modes (TElmn). Finally we will present the design and first experimental results from a resonator incorporating both of these features, opening the path to the post-inflation axion.

Publication: Exploration of Wire Array Metamaterials for the Plasma Axion Haloscope (M. Wooten et al, Annalen der Physik (2023) 2200479),<br>Tunable Wire Metamaterials for an Axion Haloscope (N. Kowitt et al., arXiv:2306.15734),<br>A Symmetric Multi-rod Tunable Microwave Cavity for the HAYSTAC Dark Matter Axion Search (M. Simanovskaia et al. Rev Sci Instrum 92, 033305 (2021))

Presenters

  • Heather Jackson

    University of California, Berkeley

Authors

  • Heather Jackson

    University of California, Berkeley

  • Samantha M Lewis

    Fermilab

  • Alexander G Droster

    University of California, Berkeley

  • Alexander F Leder

    University of California, Berkeley

  • Mirelys P Carcana Barbosa

    University of California, Berkeley

  • Dillon Goulart

    University of California, Berkeley

  • Andrei Dones

    University of California, Berkeley

  • Pablo Castaño Basurto

    University of California, Berkeley

  • Mackenzie Wooten

    University of California, Berkeley

  • Nolan Kowitt

    University of California, Berkeley

  • Karl A van Bibber

    University of California Berkeley