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Searches for Dark Matter (the Quest) Harry Nelson UCSB 2003 SLAC Summer Insitute Aug. 5-6 2003
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 2 Recap - Direct Detection Shield (shield radioactive too!)… 1 ev/(kg d keV) typical Reduce the background… HDMS, IGEX, Genius Exploit astron. propert. (year cycle, directionality) DAMA, DRIFT Devise detectors that can distinguish nuclear recoil from electron recoil… Edelweiss, CDMS, Xenon.. How to dredge the small (0.01 DRU= ev/(kg d keV)) up out of a bigger background (1 DRU typical) of recoil electrons from comptons? Indirect Detection (milli-) Charged Massive Particles Closing
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 3 v DM 1/2 300 km/s 2 v DM 1/2 =0 km/s 2 Annual Modulation in Rate `Usual Simplification’: Halo particles are at rest, on average Sun moves through Halo - `apparent’ wind Earth modulates `wind’ velocity yearly Peak-to-peak up to 40% DAMA at Gran Sasso Fig. from DRIFT
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 4 Daily Modulation in Direction Recoiling Nucleus Follows the Initial WIMP Direction… the `wind’ Detector gaseous to reconstruct recoil direction DRIFT at Boulby (Spooner) Fig. from DRIFT
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 5 DAMA – 100 kg of NaI Iodine, A=127 E obs (KeV ee ) 0.09 E recoil (KeV) Sodium, A=23 E obs (KeV ee ) 0.25 E recoil (KeV) E recoil Light NaI PMT Copper Lead Poly
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 6 through 2000 … 4 DAMA Background and Signal through 2003 … 6.3 Bernabei et al., astro-ph/0307403 Energy Spectrum Bkgd 1 cpd/kg/keV 2-6 KeV 8-24 KeV Na(23) 20-70 KeV I(127) 0.0195 0.031 -0.0001 0.019 cpd/kg/keV
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 7 DAMA noise... >1 pe threshold <10 -4 cpd...
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 8 DAMA Allowed Regions through 2003through 2000 (standard halo) 10 -42 10 -44 p (cm 2 ), = 0 / Variation mainly due to changes in halo parameters two plots not directly comparable (different halos used) With new result, DAMA ceases to employ `standard Maxwellian halo’ - comparisons challenging Na I 33 44
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 9 Halo Variation Kamionkowski and Kinkhabwala (1997)
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 10 Perhaps WIMP couples not to nucleons, but to their spin S,V,T,A,P S,A non-relativistic (V too) S - `nucleon, SI’ (or V) … A - `spin or SD’ (also, could break isospin… n p) A 2 2 J(J+1) DAMA J 0 unpaired nucleon, odd A NAIAD (Boulby) (couple to proton spin) 10 -36 10 -34 p (cm 2 ) Couple to neutron spin LIBRA 250kg, NAIAD continues, ANAIS in Spain...
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 11 00 v/c 7 10 -4 Nucleus Recoils Dense Energy Deposition v/c small; Bragg Discrimination of Recoils Signal ErEr v/c 0.3 Electron Recoils Background Sparse Energy Deposition ErEr Differences the Basis of Discrimination
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 12 Simulation (by DRIFT) 40 keV Ar in 1/20 atm Ar13 keV e - in 1/20 atm Ar 5 cm Ar pushes other Ar atoms, none go very far. Electron pushes other electrons, all go far
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 13 dE/dx for different recoils http://www.srim.org/SRIM/SRIM2003.htm Strategies Detector insensitive to small dE/dx (track etch, SDD) Convert E to two distinct measured quantities that look different depending on whether nuclear recoil or electron.
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 14 Track Etch Detectors Mica, CR39 Struck Nucleus Large dE/dx 100 Å Corrosive Etch http://moedal.web.cern.ch/moedal/moedal_track.htm Ancient Mica 0.5 10 9 yr Exposure fraction mm 2 area
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 15 Mica Result 58% 16 O 16% 28 Si 12% 27 Al 5% 39 K p (cm 2 ) 10 -37 cm 2 SD: 10 -33 cm 2 Snoden-Ifft, Freeman, Price (1994)
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 16 Superheated Droplet Detector (SDD) 10 m Gelatin Target, C 2 ClF 5 (Liquid): Temp. > Boiling 00 Spin Dependent 15 gm Collar et al., (2000) 10 -36 cm 2
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 17 Lose the Gelatin… get all Target Really a bubble chamber... CF 3 Br Juan Collar and Andrew Sonnenschein (poster session)
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 18 NaI Distinct Quantities to Measure tt Gerbier et al., 1998 10-20keV Liquid Xenon Also a scintillator (Spooner) e - recoils from ’s Nuclear recoils From neutrons t (ns) 1 10100 ’s (50-100 keV E R ) Width of pulse DAMA does not use this NaI E R : 130-150 KeV (I) 1)Time Structure of the Pulse 2)Pulse Height/Area via: a)Ionization (like Ge) b)Scintillation (like NaI) c)Heat/Phonons d)Physical Size of Ionization
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 19 to electrons Distinguishing Nuclear Recoil Nuclear recoil energy lost mainly to collisions with other nuclei Nuclear recoils deposit lots of energy in lattice excitations: phonons... heat Nuclear motion poor at causing electronic excitation, ionization
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 20 Simultaneous Measurement of Phonons(Heat) + Ionization Temperature-20 mK Temp)/ (Energy) Temp) NTD Ge Slow (10’s ms) Ionization - E applied E Background (e - from ) … strong ionization signal… equal phonon signal (!) Nuclear recoil… reduced (by 1/4) ionization signal, strong phonon signal Edelweiss
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 21 Separation of Nuclear Recoil from e - Recoil Shutt et al., 1992 Nuclear recoils (induced by a neutron source) Electron recoils (induced by a source) Slope really 1! Ionization Phonons =1 (bkgd) 1/3 (sig) E gap = 3/4 eV w = 3 eV
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 22 Edelweiss (depth: 4500 mwe) 0.32 kg/ Ge detector 3×0.32kg Germanium Detectors Roman Lead L. Chabert, EPS `03 Aachen
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 23 Edelweiss Data: ’s Suppressed by 1000 ● 7.51 kg.d exposure (fiducial volume) ● Best charg. channel : 1 keV (FWHM) ● 20 keV threshold ● 3.72 kg.d (fiduc.) ● Smaller exposure due to electronics problems ● 30 keV threshold ● 10.86 kg.d (fiducial) ● Good phonon channel 300 eV (FWHM) resolution during most of the runs ● Noisy charge channel ● 30 keV threshold Bolometer 1Bolometer 2 Bolometer 3 L. Chabert, EPS `03 Aachen
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 24 Betas... Germanium Electrode Implants E External Ionization electrons get trapped in this electrode Those electrons never drift over to the other electrode… ionization signal reduced… but, all the phonons/heat still present… (ionization)/(phonons) < 1 z CDMS effort: measure z
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 25 Edelweiss and other’s results CDMS no background subtraction hep- ex/0306001 28 kg-days (Ge, phonon/ion.) CDMS with background subtraction hep- ex/0306001 28 kg-days (Ge, phonon/ion.) ZEPLIN I (preliminary) 230 kg-days (Liq Xe) EDELWEISS 2003 no background subtraction 31 kg-days (Ge, phonon/ion.) L. Chabert, EPS `03 Aachen DAMA/Edelweiss inconsistent at 99.9%...... not accounting for differential systematics
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 26 CDMS: not as deep… neutron background 17 mwe Detectors Inner Pb shield Polyethylene Pb Shield Active Muon Veto Fridge Copper n n n R. Schnee... Experiment moved to Soudan, 2100 mwe depth
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 27 CDMS Layout, Data ZIP 1 (Ge) ZIP 2 (Ge) ZIP 3 (Ge) ZIP 4 (Si) ZIP 5 (Ge) ZIP 6 (Si) SQUID cards FET cards 4 K 0.6 K 0.06 K 0.02 K 4 Germanium Detectors (0.66 kg total) 2 Silicon Detectors (0.2 kg total) Small DM rate, high neutron rate Nuclear Recoils Surface electrons Z1 ( ) or Z5 (+) 1/5000 ’s misid’ed as nuclear recoils R. Schnee 8 cm
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 28 Technology of `ZIP’s (Z for z) Al quasiparticle trap Al Collector W Transition-Edge Sensor (TES) Si or Ge quasiparticle diffusion phonons Very different from Edelweiss, although the objective is the same… the `phono-cathode’ Cooper Pair superconducting normal T (mK) T c ~ 80mK R TES ( ) 4 3 2 1 ~ 10mK Signal much faster - microseconds 3-d imaging (Z) R. Schnee
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 29 The ZIP Phono`cathode’... 1 tungsten 380 x 60 aluminum fins 4 segments + timing to get x,y on the face rise time to get z, into the face R. Schnee
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 30 ZIP Surface Electron Rejection Neutrons from 252 Cf source (Single-scatter) photons from 60 Co Source Surface- electron recoils (selected via nearest- neighbor multiple scatters from 60 Co source) Accept Reject Surface electrons still likely to be the limiting background R. Schnee
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 31 CDMS Expected Background Levels CDMS-II Proposal 0.0024 In DRU, ev/kg/kev/day a bit dated; now X10 better, surface electron X2 better 0.00014 0.0005 0.00074
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 32 Catalog of Recoil Experiments Rick Gaitskell
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 33 Future Performances Rick Gaitskell
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 34 Prognostication
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 35 A Proposal… 5 billion years ago… (indirect DM detection) Get 10 57 protons in a sphere (ignite to enable a neutrino program) Wait for WIMPs to collect (spin-dependent cross section - proton’s spin) Detect on a nearby iron ball via the annihilation of WIMPs (with themselves) to neutrinos Review Panel’s Recommendations/Queries: 1)What if WIMP’s don’t self annihilate… no answer 2) Hey, you’re `iron ball’ is great for collecting WIMPS via spin-independent scattering, since A of Iron is big (54)! (thanks) 3) Funding for preliminary studies...
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 36 Study Results... For SUSY WIMPs… 1) Sun, rate bottleneck is capture not annihilation 2) Earth, situation reversed 3) `Relative Efficiency’ function of WIMP mass Earth… best when WIMP mass same as Iron mass… same reason hydrogen is the best neutron moderator Sun lower masses… little capture
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 37 Solar/Earth Comparison Annihilation Rate in Earth is Earth Bottleneck Capture Rate in Earth is Earth Bottlneck (for detector on Earth) (WIMP models for spin/scalar comparison)
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 38 Super-Kamiokande’s Results... Upward going muons Desai, IDM 02
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 39 Transcribe to the Direct Detection Plot Model dependent… but less so than I thought. Spin-dependent (Sun) Scalar (Earth) Desai, IDM 02
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 40 Future Indirect Detectors (neutrino) Feng, Matchev, Wilczek 2000
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 41 Cosmic Positrons - Halo WIMP annililation HEAT… terrific balloon experiment… saw an excess Edsjo, IDM 02
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 42 Positron Future… ’s too Feng, Matchev, Wilczek 2000
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 43 m (GeV) 1 10 3 10 6 10 9 10 12 10 -3 10 -6 10 -9 10 15 10 18 10 21 Davidson, Hannestad, Raffelt, hep-ph/0001179 Charge Fraction Excluded Regions Milli-CHAMP Limits Overclose Universe (Thermal)
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 44 Stable CHAMPs in Matter Perl et al., hep-ph/0102033 DM, stop in earth
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UCSBHNN 8/6/03 SLAC Summer Institute 45 Some conclusions Rutherford/Chadwick hunted neutron for 12 years Hints first seen on continent, interpreted as photons… Neutrino studies started about 90 years ago… Masses? Majorana? Still not fully nailed down... Dark Matter… Prepare for a long ride… no physical law guarantees that discoveries happen within any human’s lifetime The only guarantee: if we fail to look, we will fail to find.
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