Litcius/Paper detail

Etched plastic searches for dark matter

Amit Bhoonah, Joseph Bramante, Brian Courtman, Ningqiang Song

2021Physical review. D/Physical review. D.32 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Large panels of etched plastic, situated aboard the Skylab Space Station and inside the Ohya quarry near Tokyo, have been used to set limits on fluxes of cosmogenic particles. These plastic particle track detectors also provide the best sensitivity for some heavy dark matter that interacts strongly with nuclei. We revisit prior dark matter bounds from Skylab, and incorporate geometry-dependent thresholds, a halo velocity distribution, and a complete accounting of observed through-going particle fluxes. These considerations reduce the Skylab bound's mass range by a few orders of magnitude. However, a new analysis of Ohya data covers a portion of the prior Skylab bound, and excludes dark matter masses up to the Planck mass. Prospects for future etched plastic dark matter searches are discussed.

Topics & Concepts

Dark matterPhysicsWeakly interacting massive particlesAstrophysicsAstronomyRange (aeronautics)HaloParticle (ecology)CosmologyScalar field dark matterGeologyDark energyAerospace engineeringGalaxyOceanographyEngineeringDark Matter and Cosmic PhenomenaParticle physics theoretical and experimental studiesCosmology and Gravitation Theories