DAEdALUS and Dark Matter Detection
Abstract
Among laboratory probes of dark matter, fixed-target neutrino experiments are particularly well-suited to search for light weakly-coupled dark sectors. In this paper, we show that the DAEdALUS source setup---an 800 MeV proton beam impinging on a target of graphite and copper---can improve the present LSND bound on dark photon models by an order of magnitude over much of the accessible parameter space for light dark matter when paired with a suitable neutrino detector such as LENA. Interestingly, both DAEdALUS and LSND are sensitive to dark matter produced from off-shell dark photons. We show for the first time that LSND can be competitive with searches for visible dark photon decays, and that fixed-target experiments have sensitivity to a much larger range of heavy dark photon masses than previously thought. We review the mechanism for dark matter production and detection through a dark photon mediator, discuss the beam-off and beam-on backgrounds, and present the sensitivity in dark photon kinetic mixing for both the DAEdALUS/LENA setup and LSND in both the on- and off-shell regimes.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1411.1055,
title = {DAEdALUS and Dark Matter Detection},
author = {Yonatan Kahn and Gordan Krnjaic and Jesse Thaler and Matthew Toups},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1411.1055},
year = {2015}
}
Comments
22 pages, 8 figures, 2 tables; v3: typos fixed, some points of the discussion clarified. Title changed to match PRD version. v2: references added