Published September 26, 2024 | Published
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Dark Matter Candidates of a Very Low Mass

  • 1. ROR icon California Institute of Technology
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Abstract

We review dark matter (DM) candidates of a very low mass appearing in the window below the traditional weakly interacting massive particle (mχ ≲ 10 GeV) and extending down to mχ ≳ 1 meV, somewhat below the mass limit at which DM becomes wavelike. Such candidates are motivated by hidden sectors such as hidden valleys, which feature hidden forces and rich dynamics, but have evaded traditional accelerator searches for New Physics because of their relatively weak coupling to the Standard Model (SM). Such sectors can still be detected through dedicated low-energy colliders, which, through their intense beams, can have sensitivity to smaller couplings, or through astrophysical observations of the evolution of DM halos and stellar structures, which, through the Universe's epochs, can be sensitive to small DM interactions. We also consider mechanisms whereby the DM abundance is fixed through the interaction with the SM, which directly motivates the search for light DM in terrestrial experiments. The bulk of this review is dedicated to the new ideas that have been proposed for direct detection of such DM candidates of a low mass through nuclear recoils, electronic excitations, or collective modes such as phonons and magnons. The rich tapestry of materials and modes in the condensed matter landscape is reviewed along with specific prospects for detection.

Copyright and License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. See credit lines of images or other third-party material in this article for license information.

Acknowledgement

I thank Yufeng Du, Osmond Wen, Zhengkang Zhang, and especially Clara Murgui and Tanner Trickle for a careful reading of the manuscript. This work was supported by the US Department of Energy, Office of Science, Quantum Information Science Enabled Discovery (QuantISED) for High Energy Physics (KA2401032), by the Office of High Energy Physics (award DE-SC0011632), by a Simons Investigator Award, and by the Walter Burke Institute for Theoretical Physics.

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Created:
October 3, 2024
Modified:
November 8, 2024