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Abstract
We propose the Optomechanical Dark-matter Instrument (ODIN), based on a new method for the direct detection of low-mass dark matter. We consider dark matter interacting with superfluid helium in an optomechanical cavity. Using an effective field theory, we calculate the rate at which dark matter scatters off phonons in a highly populated, driven acoustic mode of the cavity. This scattering process deposits a phonon into a second acoustic mode in its ground state. The deposited phonon (μeV range) is then converted to a photon (eV range) via an optomechanical interaction with a pump laser. This photon can be efficiently detected, providing a means to sensitively probe keV scale dark matter. We provide realistic estimates of the backgrounds and discuss the technical challenges associated with such an experiment. We calculate projected limits on dark matter-nucleon interactions for dark matter masses ranging from 0.5 to 300 keV and estimate that a future device could probe cross sections as low as O(10-32) cm2.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 043005 |
Journal | Physical Review D |
Volume | 110 |
Issue number | 4 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 15 Aug 2024 |
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Centre of Excellence for Dark Matter Particle Physics
Barberio, E., Williams, A., Bell, N., Stuchbery, A., Tobar, M., Boehm, C. & Wallner, A.
ARC Australian Research Council
1/01/20 → 31/12/26
Project: Research
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Wideband Tuneable Low Phase Noise Oscillators for 5G
Tobar, M., Goryachev, M. & Ivanov, E.
ARC Centre of Excellence for Engineered Quantum Systems
1/01/21 → 31/12/21
Project: Research