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Sensitivity of Spin-Precession Axion Experiments

A leading direction in the hunt for axion dark matter is to search for its influence on nuclear spins. The detection scheme involves polarizing a sample of nuclei within a strong static magnetic field and then looking for a spin precession induced by the oscillating axion field. We study the axion s...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Dror, Jeff A., Gori, Stefania, Leedom, Jacob M., Rodd, Nicholas L.
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.130.181801
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2836929
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author Dror, Jeff A.
Gori, Stefania
Leedom, Jacob M.
Rodd, Nicholas L.
author_facet Dror, Jeff A.
Gori, Stefania
Leedom, Jacob M.
Rodd, Nicholas L.
author_sort Dror, Jeff A.
collection CERN
description A leading direction in the hunt for axion dark matter is to search for its influence on nuclear spins. The detection scheme involves polarizing a sample of nuclei within a strong static magnetic field and then looking for a spin precession induced by the oscillating axion field. We study the axion signal and background contributions that arise in such experiments (a prominent example being CASPEr), finding key differences with the existing literature. Most importantly, in the limit where the transverse spin-relaxation time of the material is the largest timescale of the problem, we show that the induced signal continues to grow even beyond the coherence time of the axion field. As a result, we find that spin-precession instruments are much more sensitive than what has been previously estimated in a sizable range of axion masses, with sensitivity improvement of up to a factor of 100 at an axion mass of 100 neV using a Xenon-129 sample. This improves the detection prospects for the QCD axion, and we estimate the experimental requirements to reach this motivated target. Our results apply to both the axion electric and magnetic dipole moment operators.
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institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2022
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spelling cern-28369292023-05-17T03:45:18Zdoi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.130.181801http://cds.cern.ch/record/2836929engDror, Jeff A.Gori, StefaniaLeedom, Jacob M.Rodd, Nicholas L.Sensitivity of Spin-Precession Axion Experimentshep-exParticle Physics - Experimentastro-ph.COAstrophysics and Astronomyhep-phParticle Physics - PhenomenologyA leading direction in the hunt for axion dark matter is to search for its influence on nuclear spins. The detection scheme involves polarizing a sample of nuclei within a strong static magnetic field and then looking for a spin precession induced by the oscillating axion field. We study the axion signal and background contributions that arise in such experiments (a prominent example being CASPEr), finding key differences with the existing literature. Most importantly, in the limit where the transverse spin-relaxation time of the material is the largest timescale of the problem, we show that the induced signal continues to grow even beyond the coherence time of the axion field. As a result, we find that spin-precession instruments are much more sensitive than what has been previously estimated in a sizable range of axion masses, with sensitivity improvement of up to a factor of 100 at an axion mass of 100 neV using a Xenon-129 sample. This improves the detection prospects for the QCD axion, and we estimate the experimental requirements to reach this motivated target. Our results apply to both the axion electric and magnetic dipole moment operators.We study the signal and background that arise in nuclear magnetic resonance searches for axion dark matter, finding key differences with the existing literature. We find that spin-precession instruments are much more sensitive than what has been previously estimated in a sizable range of axion masses, with sensitivity improvement of up to a factor of 100 using a <math display="inline"><mrow><mmultiscripts><mrow><mi>Xe</mi></mrow><mprescripts/><none/><mrow><mn>129</mn></mrow></mmultiscripts></mrow></math> sample. This improves the detection prospects for the QCD axion, and we estimate the experimental requirements to reach this motivated target. Our results apply to both the axion electric and magnetic dipole moment operators.arXiv:2210.06481CERN-TH-2022-163DESY 22-155oai:cds.cern.ch:28369292022-10-12
spellingShingle hep-ex
Particle Physics - Experiment
astro-ph.CO
Astrophysics and Astronomy
hep-ph
Particle Physics - Phenomenology
Dror, Jeff A.
Gori, Stefania
Leedom, Jacob M.
Rodd, Nicholas L.
Sensitivity of Spin-Precession Axion Experiments
title Sensitivity of Spin-Precession Axion Experiments
title_full Sensitivity of Spin-Precession Axion Experiments
title_fullStr Sensitivity of Spin-Precession Axion Experiments
title_full_unstemmed Sensitivity of Spin-Precession Axion Experiments
title_short Sensitivity of Spin-Precession Axion Experiments
title_sort sensitivity of spin-precession axion experiments
topic hep-ex
Particle Physics - Experiment
astro-ph.CO
Astrophysics and Astronomy
hep-ph
Particle Physics - Phenomenology
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.130.181801
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2836929
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AT goristefania sensitivityofspinprecessionaxionexperiments
AT leedomjacobm sensitivityofspinprecessionaxionexperiments
AT roddnicholasl sensitivityofspinprecessionaxionexperiments