English

Dark Matter Direct Detection with Accelerometers

High Energy Physics - Phenomenology 2016-04-27 v2 Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics High Energy Physics - Experiment Quantum Physics

Abstract

The mass of the dark matter particle is unknown, and may be as low as ~102210^{-22} eV. The lighter part of this range, below ~eV, is relatively unexplored both theoretically and experimentally but contains an array of natural dark matter candidates. An example is the relaxion, a light boson predicted by cosmological solutions to the hierarchy problem. One of the few generic signals such light dark matter can produce is a time-oscillating, EP-violating force. We propose searches for this using accelerometers, and consider in detail the examples of torsion balances, atom interferometry, and pulsar timing. These approaches have the potential to probe large parts of unexplored parameter space in the next several years. Thus such accelerometers provide radically new avenues for the direct detection of dark matter.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1512.06165,
  title  = {Dark Matter Direct Detection with Accelerometers},
  author = {Peter W. Graham and David E. Kaplan and Jeremy Mardon and Surjeet Rajendran and William A. Terrano},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1512.06165},
  year   = {2016}
}

Comments

22 pages, 4 figures, includes 1 page Executive Summary. Version 2: typos fixed, citations added

R2 v1 2026-06-22T12:13:49.714Z