Bulletin of the American Physical Society
2018 Joint Fall Meeting of the Texas Sections of APS, AAPT and Zone 13 of the SPS
Volume 63, Number 18
Friday–Saturday, October 19–20, 2018; University of Houston, Houston, Texas
Session C05: High Energy and Particle Physics I
2:25 PM–4:01 PM,
Friday, October 19, 2018
Science and Engineering Classroom (SEC)
Room: 101
Chair: Trey Holik, Angelo State University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2018.TSF.C05.2
Abstract: C05.00002 : Direct detection of dark matter WIMPs with cryogenic detectors like SuperCDMS, including a new kind of dark matter candidate with well-defined mass and couplings
2:37 PM–2:49 PM
Presenter:
Maxwell E Throm
(Texas A&M University)
Author:
Maxwell E Throm
(Texas A&M University)
There is increasing tension between experiment and the proposal that supersymmetry (susy) can explain dark matter. Here we survey the potential for cryogenic detectors like SuperCDMS to observe dark matter WIMPs (weakly interacting massive particles), with emphasis on both neutralinos and a new kind of dark matter candidate with well-defined mass and couplings [1]. Like the neutralino, this new candidate is charge neutral, with only weak and gravitational interactions; and it has a spin of 1/2 and an R-parity of -1, making it stable if its mass is less than that of the lowest mass superpartner. But its interactions --i.e., couplings to W and Z bosons -- are in a sense weaker than those of the neutralino, since they are either second-order or momentum-dependent. The relatively weak interactions of the present particles may then explain why dark matter particles have not yet been detected. Nevertheless, they constitute an ideal dark matter candidate in other respects. For example, since their mass is ~ 10-100 GeV and they are WIMPs, they would have been created in the early universe in about the right abundance to explain the astronomical observations.
[1] Roland E. Allen and Aritra Saha, `Mod. Phys. Lett. A 32, 1730022 (2017), arXiv:1706.00882 [hep-ph].
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2018.TSF.C05.2
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