The fundamental nature of Dark Matter is a central theme of the Snowmass 2021 process, extending across all Frontiers. In the last decade, advances in detector technology, analysis techniques and theoretical modeling have enabled a new generation of experiments and searches while broadening the types of candidates we can pursue. Over the next decade, there is great potential for discoveries that would transform our understanding of dark matter. In the following, we outline a road map for discovery developed in collaboration among the Frontiers. A strong portfolio of experiments that delves deep, searches wide, and harnesses the complementarity between techniques is key to tackling this complicated problem, requiring expertise, results, and planning from all Frontiers of the Snowmass 2021 process.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2211.07027,
title = {Snowmass 2021 Dark Matter Complementarity Report},
author = {Antonio Boveia and Mohamed Berkat and Thomas Y. Chen and Aman Desai and Caterina Doglioni and Alex Drlica-Wagner and Susan Gardner and Stefania Gori and Joshua Greaves and Patrick Harding and Philip C. Harris and W. Hugh Lippincott and Maria Elena Monzani and Katherine Pachal and Chanda Prescod-Weinstein and Gray Rybka and Bibhushan Shakya and Jessie Shelton and Tracy R. Slatyer and Amanda Steinhebel and Philip Tanedo and Natalia Toro and Yun-Tse Tsai and Mike Williams and Lindley Winslow and Jaehoon Yu and Tien-Tien Yu},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2211.07027},
year = {2022}
}
Comments
10 pages, 5 figures. Version prepared for inclusion in the Snowmass Book. Extended version at arXiv:2210.01770. v2: fixed authors and affiliations