21 research outputs found
Direct Detection of sub-GeV Dark Matter with Semiconductor Targets
Dark matter in the sub-GeV mass range is a theoretically motivated but
largely unexplored paradigm. Such light masses are out of reach for
conventional nuclear recoil direct detection experiments, but may be detected
through the small ionization signals caused by dark matter-electron scattering.
Semiconductors are well-studied and are particularly promising target materials
because their band gaps allow for ionization signals from
dark matter as light as a few hundred keV. Current direct detection
technologies are being adapted for dark matter-electron scattering. In this
paper, we provide the theoretical calculations for dark matter-electron
scattering rate in semiconductors, overcoming several complications that stem
from the many-body nature of the problem. We use density functional theory to
numerically calculate the rates for dark matter-electron scattering in silicon
and germanium, and estimate the sensitivity for upcoming experiments such as
DAMIC and SuperCDMS. We find that the reach for these upcoming experiments has
the potential to be orders of magnitude beyond current direct detection
constraints and that sub-GeV dark matter has a sizable modulation signal. We
also give the first direct detection limits on sub-GeV dark matter from its
scattering off electrons in a semiconductor target (silicon) based on published
results from DAMIC. We make available publicly our code, QEdark, with which we
calculate our results. Our results can be used by experimental collaborations
to calculate their own sensitivities based on their specific setup. The
searches we propose will probe vast new regions of unexplored dark matter model
and parameter space.Comment: 30 pages + 22 pages appendices/references, 17 figures, website at
http://ddldm.physics.sunysb.edu/, v2 added references, minor edits to text
and Figs. 2 and 14, version to appear in JHE
How Water's Properties Are Encoded in Its Molecular Structure and Energies.
How are water's material properties encoded within the structure of the water molecule? This is pertinent to understanding Earth's living systems, its materials, its geochemistry and geophysics, and a broad spectrum of its industrial chemistry. Water has distinctive liquid and solid properties: It is highly cohesive. It has volumetric anomalies-water's solid (ice) floats on its liquid; pressure can melt the solid rather than freezing the liquid; heating can shrink the liquid. It has more solid phases than other materials. Its supercooled liquid has divergent thermodynamic response functions. Its glassy state is neither fragile nor strong. Its component ions-hydroxide and protons-diffuse much faster than other ions. Aqueous solvation of ions or oils entails large entropies and heat capacities. We review how these properties are encoded within water's molecular structure and energies, as understood from theories, simulations, and experiments. Like simpler liquids, water molecules are nearly spherical and interact with each other through van der Waals forces. Unlike simpler liquids, water's orientation-dependent hydrogen bonding leads to open tetrahedral cage-like structuring that contributes to its remarkable volumetric and thermal properties
Fully ab-initio all-electron calculation of dark matter--electron scattering in crystals with evaluation of systematic uncertainties
We calculate target-material responses for dark matter--electron scattering
at the \textit{ab-initio} all-electron level using atom-centered gaussian basis
sets. The all-electron effects enhance the material response at high momentum
transfers from dark matter to electrons, , compared to calculations using conventional plane wave methods,
including those used in QEDark; this enhances the expected event rates at
energy transfers ~eV, especially when scattering through heavy
mediators. We carefully test a range of systematic uncertainties in the theory
calculation, including those arising from the choice of basis set,
exchange-correlation functional, number of unit cells in the Bloch sum,
-mesh, and neglect of scatters with very high momentum transfers.
We provide state-of-the-art crystal form factors, focusing on silicon and
germanium. Our code and results are made publicly available as a new tool,
called Quantum Chemistry Dark (``QCDark'').Comment: 15 pages, plus references and appendices, 12 figure
Visualization of lithium-ion transport and phase evolution within and between manganese oxide nanorods.
Multiple lithium-ion transport pathways and local phase changes upon lithiation in silver hollandite are revealed via in situ microscopy including electron diffraction, imaging and spectroscopy, coupled with density functional theory and phase field calculations. We report unexpected inter-nanorod lithium-ion transport, where the reaction fronts and kinetics are maintained within the neighbouring nanorod. Notably, this is the first time-resolved visualization of lithium-ion transport within and between individual nanorods, where the impact of oxygen deficiencies is delineated. Initially, fast lithium-ion transport is observed along the long axis with small net volume change, resulting in two lithiated silver hollandite phases distinguishable by orthorhombic distortion. Subsequently, a slower reaction front is observed, with formation of polyphase lithiated silver hollandite and face-centred-cubic silver metal with substantial volume expansion. These results indicate lithium-ion transport is not confined within a single nanorod and may provide a paradigm shift for one-dimensional tunnelled materials, particularly towards achieving high-rate capability
Early Science with the Oscura Integration Test
Oscura is a planned light-dark matter search experiment using Skipper-CCDs
with a total active mass of 10 kg. As part of the detector development, the
collaboration plans to build the Oscura Integration Test (OIT), an engineering
test experiment with 10% of the Oscura's total mass. Here we discuss the early
science opportunities with the OIT to search for millicharged particles (mCPs)
using the NuMI beam at Fermilab. mCPs would be produced at low energies through
photon-mediated processes from decays of scalar, pseudoscalar, and vector
mesons, or direct Drell-Yan productions. Estimates show that the OIT would be a
world-leading probe for low-mass mCPs.Comment: 21 pages, 13 figure
Skipper-CCD Sensors for the Oscura Experiment: Requirements and Preliminary Tests
Oscura is a proposed multi-kg skipper-CCD experiment designed for a dark
matter (DM) direct detection search that will reach unprecedented sensitivity
to sub-GeV DM-electron interactions with its 10 kg detector array. Oscura is
planning to operate at SNOLAB with 2070 m overburden, and aims to reach a
background goal of less than one event in each electron bin in the 2-10
electron ionization-signal region for the full 30 kg-year exposure, with a
radiation background rate of 0.01 dru. In order to achieve this goal, Oscura
must address each potential source of background events, including instrumental
backgrounds. In this work, we discuss the main instrumental background sources
and the strategy to control them, establishing a set of constraints on the
sensors' performance parameters. We present results from the tests of the first
fabricated Oscura prototype sensors, evaluate their performance in the context
of the established constraints and estimate the Oscura instrumental background
based on these results