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15–18 Feb 2022
virtual
America/Vancouver timezone
WNPPC2022 Booklet has been added. See also information about today's special guest: Dr. Eden Hennessey

Discovering Composite Dark Matter with the Migdal Effect

16 Feb 2022, 10:36
12m
virtual

virtual

Dark Matter Searches Dark Matter Searches

Speaker

Javier Acevedo (Queen's University)

Description

An intriguing possibility for dark matter is that it formed bound states in the early Universe, in a scenario called “composite” dark matter, much like the Standard Model fundamental particles formed nucleons, nuclei and atoms. One of the simplest composite dark matter models consists of dark matter fermions bound together by a real scalar field. Composite states that are massive enough source scalar fields so intense that nuclei, when coupled to this force, can recoil upon contact to energies capable of ionization through the Migdal effect. Combined with the large sizes of these composites, the ionization signal produced by their transit at dark matter experiments is detectable even for minuscule couplings between nuclei and the dark matter. In this talk, I will discuss the discovery prospects of composite states at noble element detectors like Xenon-1T and other underground experiments by considering the Migdal effect.

email address 17jfa1@queensu.ca
Please select: Experiment or Theory Theory

Primary author

Javier Acevedo (Queen's University)

Presentation materials