DARK MAtter for Precision experiments (DARKMAP)

Lead Research Organisation: Durham University
Department Name: Physics

Abstract

Our best understanding of the inner working of the Universe demands that Dark Matter contributes about 80% of the total mass of the Universe, shaping its form at all astronomical scales.
However, the composition of Dark Matter in terms of fundamental particles remains a puzzle
and all attempts to solve it through measurements or direct observation have failed to date.
Established experiments have focussed on searches for Dark Matter that scatters off heavy atoms in deep underground labs, assuming it behaves like slowly moving particles. This type of Dark Matter is called Weakly Interacting Massive Particle (WIMP) and its mass is a multiple of the proton mass.
For Dark Matter masses below the mass of a Carbon atom the momentum of the slowly moving WIMPs drops below the recoil threshold of the heavy nuclei used in these experiments and it cannot be detected anymore.
If Dark Matter is much lighter, its properties are fundamentally different, and it would be better described as a homogeneous fluid-like substance instead of a cloud of massive particle. Experiments searching for elastic scattering are entirely insensitive in this case. This very light Dark Matter behaves more like a new force acting very weakly on electrons and nuclei or affecting their spin. In this case the expected effects are tiny and can only be observed in extremely precise measurements of fundamental constants and interactions.

This project is a truly multidisciplinary effort to enable the search for dark matter with high-precision atomic physics experiments. Many of these experiments have made enormous progress during the last decades, increasing their sensitivity by many orders of magnitude. These high-precision experiments can potentially measure the very minute effects exerted by interactions of light and very light dark matter. The theoretical mechanism underlying the production of this type of dark matter in the universe helps, because it predicts resonantly enhanced time-dependent signals, if the experiment can be designed to pick it up. Depending on the specific interaction, one dedicated or a variety of experiments might be the right strategy.
In order to answer this question a consistent theoretical framework will be developed taking into account the complex structure of quantum field theories necessary to describe dark matter at high energies. Even though high-precision experiments are performed at rather low energies compared to collider experiments or even some astrophysical processes these calculations are necessary to correctly derive observables and correlations between observables for these experiments. This framework further makes the different experimental approaches comparable and existing limits can be used to optimise future experiments. With this in hand we can collaborate with atomic physicists throughout the UK to design an experimental programme exploiting the untapped potential of high-precision experiments to search for and potentially discover dark matter.

Planned Impact

The direct impact from this research proposal ranges from the discovery of dark matter to advancing the establishment of a new research direction at the interface of fundamental physics and high-precision experiments. Atomic clocks, interferometer, spectroscopy experiments and other atomic experiments have improved significantly over the last decades to the point at which they can compete and outperform other experimental techniques used to search for fundamental particles. The application of this technology for fundamental physics is a new, highly promising research direction. This project lays the theoretical foundation to enable these experiments to search for dark matter. Students benefiting from the training in this project will shape and lead the broader field in the 21st century.

A core objective of this proposal is the collaboration with experimentalists designing and building high-precision experiments. The inherent challenges coming with optimising these experiments for searches for dark matter opens up opportunities for quantum hubs and UK businesses to produce technology and components required for these modifications. These beneficiaries will pioneer this technology and advance to world leaders in this segment. Quantum technology has the potential to eventually underlie a whole new technological infrastructure, much as the semiconductor revolution changed everything in last half of the 20th century.

Further beneficiaries will use this infrastructure built to perform the measurements proposed in the context of this programme. Fiber quantum networks built to synchronise atomic clocks at different UK institutions can be used for industries relying on ultra-precise time measurements. This includes financial industries, the internet, satellite broadcast and military applications. Medium to longterm this programme can pave the way to industrial scale gravimeters with future applications in devices similar to modern day GPS sensors.

The wider public will benefit from the engagement of our group in the outreach programme communicating the enthusiasm for this new research field. This includes the participation in science festivals, public lectures and school visits to advance the public understanding of science as a vital function of active research.

Publications

10 25 50
publication icon
Agrawal P (2021) Feebly-interacting particles: FIPs 2020 workshop report in The European Physical Journal C

publication icon
Bauer M (2022) Flavor probes of axion-like particles in Journal of High Energy Physics

publication icon
Bauer M (2021) Flavor structure of anomaly-free hidden photon models in Physical Review D

publication icon
Bauer M (2021) The low-energy effective theory of axions and ALPs in Journal of High Energy Physics

 
Description I will submit these at the end of the grant period
Exploitation Route I will submit these at the end of the grant period
Sectors Education,Electronics,Energy

 
Description I will submit these at the end of the grant period