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Intensity interferometry for ultralight bosonic dark matter detection

Hector Masia‐Roig, Nataniel L. Figueroa, Ariday Bordon, Joseph A. Smiga, Y. V. Stadnik, Dmitry Budker, Gary P. Centers, A. V. Gramolin, Paul Hamilton, Sami Khamis, Christopher Palm, Szymon Pustelny, Alexander O. Sushkov, Arne Wickenbrock, Derek F. Jackson Kimball

2023Physical review. D/Physical review. D.17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Ultralight bosonic dark matter (UBDM) can be described by a classical wavelike field oscillating near the Compton frequency of the bosons. If a measurement scheme for the direct detection of UBDM interactions is sensitive to a signature quadratic in the field, then there is a near-zero-frequency (dc) component of the signal. Thus, a detector with a given finite bandwidth can be used to search for bosons with Compton frequencies many orders of magnitude larger than its bandwidth. This opens the possibility of a detection scheme analogous to Hanbury Brown and Twiss intensity interferometry. Assuming that the UBDM is virialized in the Galactic gravitational potential, the random velocities produce slight deviations from the Compton frequency. These result in stochastic fluctuations of the intensity on a timescale determined by the spread in kinetic energies. In order to mitigate ubiquitous local low-frequency noise, a network of sensors can be used to search for the stochastic intensity fluctuations by measuring cross-correlation between the sensors. This method is inherently broadband, since a large range of Compton frequencies will yield near-zero-frequency components within the sensor bandwidth that can be searched for simultaneously. Measurements with existing sensor networks have sufficient sensitivity to search experimentally unexplored parameter space.

Topics & Concepts

PhysicsInterferometryComputational physicsBandwidth (computing)Dark matterGravitational waveDetectorBosonOpticsQuantum mechanicsParticle physicsTelecommunicationsComputer scienceDark Matter and Cosmic PhenomenaAtomic and Subatomic Physics ResearchCosmology and Gravitation Theories
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