New Projections for Dark Matter Searches with Paleo-Detectors
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Dark Matter Signals in Paleo-Detectors
- High-resolution readout scenario: We assume that 10 mg of material can be read out with a track length resolution of nm. This scenario may be achievable with Helium Ion Beam Microscopy (HIBM) combined with pulsed-laser and fast-ion-beam ablation techniques [46,47,53,54,55,56]. As we will see, this scenario is advantageous for low-mass (GeV) WIMP searches.
3. Backgrounds
- Cosmogenics: In order to mitigate backgrounds from cosmic rays, minerals to be used as paleo-detectors must have been shielded by a large overburden for as long as they have been recording nuclear damage tracks (just as conventional direct detection experiments are operated in deep underground laboratories). Paleo-detectors require only (at most) a few kg of target material rather than actively operating a tonne-scale experiment; such modest amounts of materials can be sourced from even greater depths than those of existing underground laboratories. One promising source of samples is (existing) boreholes drilled for geological R&D or oil exploration. For example, for an overburden of 5 km rock, the cosmogenic-muon-induced neutron flux is [110], leading to negligible backgrounds for the purposes of a paleo-detector. We note that at depths km rock, backgrounds from atmospheric neutrinos producing neutrons in the vicinity of the target become comparable to the backgrounds from cosmogenic muons [111]. We also note that paleo-detector samples can be stored near the surface after extraction from deep in the Earth before readout. For example, the cosmogenic-muon-induced neutron flux in a ∼50 m deep storage facility is ≲.
- Astrophysical Neutrinos: Neutrinos scattering off nuclei in a paleo-detector sample give rise to nuclear damage tracks. We include neutrinos from the Sun, supernovae, and the interactions of cosmic rays with the Earth’s atmosphere in our background modeling. We take the solar and atmospheric neutrino fluxes from Reference [112]. Because of the long integration times, paleo-detectors are sensitive not only to neutrinos from supernovae in far-away galaxies throughout our Universe (the Diffuse Supernova Neutrino Background, DSNB), but also to neutrinos from local supernovae—the supernova rate in the Milky Way is estimated to be 2–3 per 100 years [113,114,115,116,117,118]. We compute the DSNB spectrum and the contribution from Galactic supernovae as in Reference [76]; see also References [118,119,120,121,122]. The neutrino-induced background is dominated by solar neutrinos at track lengths below ∼100 nm, with supernova neutrinos giving the largest contributions for tracks of a few 100 nm, before atmospheric neutrinos dominate the neutrino-induced backgrounds at even longer track lengths. Note that while neutrino-induced nuclear recoils are a background for DM searches, they can also be an interesting signal for paleo-detectors; see References [76,77,78].
- Radiogenics: Any natural mineral used as a paleo-detector will contain trace amounts of radioactive materials. In order to mitigate radiogenic backgrounds, it is crucial to use minerals with as low a concentration of radioactive elements as possible. The most important radioactive isotope for paleo-detectors is . Typical minerals formed in the Earth’s crust have concentrations of order ∼ g/g, leading to prohibitively large backgrounds for DM searches. However, minerals that constitute so-called Ultra Basic Rocks (UBRs), formed from the material of the Earth’s mantle, and Marine Evaporites (MEs), formed from evaporated sea water, have typical concentrations orders of magnitude lower [123,124,125,126,127,128,129], (see also Reference [36] and especially the discussion in the appendix of Reference [76]). As in previous works on paleo-detectors [35,36,37,76,77], we will assume benchmark concentrations of g/g for UBRs and g/g for MEs.
4. Sensitivity Forecasts
5. Summary and Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Mineral | Composition | Fiducial U Concentration [per Weight, g/g] |
---|---|---|
Halite | NaCl | |
Gypsum | Ca(SO(HO) | |
Sinjarite | CaClHO) | |
Olivine | MgFe(SiO) | |
Phlogopite | KMgAlSiOF(OH) | |
Nchwaningite | MnSiO(OH)HO) |
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Baum, S.; Edwards, T. .; Freese, K.; Stengel, P. New Projections for Dark Matter Searches with Paleo-Detectors. Instruments 2021, 5, 21. https://doi.org/10.3390/instruments5020021
Baum S, Edwards T , Freese K, Stengel P. New Projections for Dark Matter Searches with Paleo-Detectors. Instruments. 2021; 5(2):21. https://doi.org/10.3390/instruments5020021
Chicago/Turabian StyleBaum, Sebastian, Thomas D. P. Edwards, Katherine Freese, and Patrick Stengel. 2021. "New Projections for Dark Matter Searches with Paleo-Detectors" Instruments 5, no. 2: 21. https://doi.org/10.3390/instruments5020021
APA StyleBaum, S., Edwards, T. ., Freese, K., & Stengel, P. (2021). New Projections for Dark Matter Searches with Paleo-Detectors. Instruments, 5(2), 21. https://doi.org/10.3390/instruments5020021