4 research outputs found

    US Cosmic Visions: New Ideas in Dark Matter 2017: Community Report

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    This white paper summarizes the workshop "U.S. Cosmic Visions: New Ideas in Dark Matter" held at University of Maryland on March 23-25, 2017.Comment: 102 pages + reference

    Inference on Dark Matter in Effective Field Theories : From XENON1T towards XENONnT: Chiral effective field theory analysis of nuclear recoils, single electrons and uncommon background modelling

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    Cosmological and astronomical observations show that most of the matter in the Universe is dark. This dissertation provides an overview of the dark matter evidence, and focuses on the particle dark matter hypothesis, describing possible particle candidates, concentrating on the Weakly Interactive Massive Particles (WIMPs). It describes the main WIMP detection strategies and addresses the subject of WIMP scattering in direct detection experiments. This work analyses the data from the XENON1T experiment, investigating within a Chiral Effective Field Theory (ChEFT) framework the nuclear recoils from possible WIMP interactions. It presents the XENON1T detector, the main backgrounds, the xenon signal emission model and the background studies, and describes the statistical inference adopted in the analysis. The XENON1T detector was a dual-phase Time Projection Chamber (TPC) using a ~2 tonne liquid xenon target to detect scattering particles. WIMPs with masses above ~10GeV/c2 scattering against the xenon nuclei would deposit enough energy to create an observable event. The ChEFT analysis is performed on the XENON1T data from 278.8 days of operation for a total exposure of 1 tonneĂ—year, with a combined likelihood of two science runs. The region of interest for this analysis was extended from [4.9, 40.9] keVnr, in the Spin Independent analysis, to [4.9, 54.4] keVnr, to increase the acceptance of possible models with rates peaking at higher energies (&gt;0keVnr). The analysis shows that the data is consistent with a background only hypothesis and provides constraints on the interaction coefficients and the physics scale for 25 different operators. The analysis is complemented by limits on three benchmark models of interaction using ChEFT. For these models we investigate the effect of isospin breaking interactions, reporting cancellation regions where the limit worsens up to 6 orders of magnitude with respect to the isospin conserving case. The dissertation is complemented with the dark matter-electron scattering study within an EFT framework, analysing the single or few electron emission signals in XENON1T. The analysis provides the first experimental limits on the dark matter-electron effective operators for the magnetic and electric dipole, and anapole interactions. Lastly, the dissertation describes an example of introducing a data-driven background model in an inference framework based on explicit multidimensional likelihood computation. The background modelling is done using calibration data from the XENONnT detector, the next iteration of a dual-phase xenon TPC in the XENON detector family, which is currently in operation.At the time of the doctoral defense, the following papers were unpublished and had a status as follows: Paper 1: Manuscript. Paper 2: Submitted.</p
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