4 research outputs found
Design and performance of the ADMX SQUID-based microwave receiver
The Axion Dark Matter eXperiment (ADMX) was designed to detect ultra-weakly
interacting relic axion particles by searching for their conversion to
microwave photons in a resonant cavity positioned in a strong magnetic field.
Given the extremely low expected axion-photon conversion power we have
designed, built and operated a microwave receiver based on a Superconducting
QUantum Interference Device (SQUID). We describe the ADMX receiver in detail as
well as the analysis of narrow band microwave signals. We demonstrate the
sustained use of a SQUID amplifier operating between 812 and 860 MHz with a
noise temperature of 1 K. The receiver has a noise equivalent power of
1.1x10^-24 W/sqrt(Hz) in the band of operation for an integration time of
1.8x10^3 s.Comment: 8 pages, 12 figures, Submitted to Nuclear Inst. and Methods in
Physics Research,
A Search for Hidden Sector Photons with ADMX
The article of record as published may be located at http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.105.171801Hidden U(1) gauge symmetries are common to many extensions of the Standard Model proposed to explain dark matter. The hidden gauge vector bosons of such extensions may mix kinetically with Standard Model photons, providing a means for electromagnetic power to pass through conducting barriers. The ADMX detector was used to search for hidden vector bosons originating in an emitter cavity driven with microwave power. We exclude hidden vector bosons with kinetic couplings {\chi} > 3.48x10-8 for masses less than 3 {\mu}eV. This limit represents an improvement of more than two orders of magnitude in sensitivity relative to previous cavity experiments