Exploring the Unexplored: Searching for Dark Matter in the Mass Range from 10 MEV- 1GEV

Exploring the Unexplored: Searching for Dark Matter
October 28, 2021
Monday, November 8, 2021

Join us for the Physics Department Colloquium at 4:15 p.m.

Title: Exploring the Unexplored: Searching for Dark Matter in the mass range from 10meV-1GeV.

Substantial astronomical observations have established that approximately 25% of the energy density of the universe is composed of cold non-baryonic dark matter, whose detection and characterization could be key to improving our understanding of the laws of physics. Over the past three decades, physicists have largely focused on searching for dark matter within the 10 GeV-1 TeV range (WIMPs), unfortunately without success. Over the past decade, the theoretical physics community has developed a variety of viable dark matter models with mass in the
range of 10meV-1GeV and now the race is on to develop the detector technology and search this nearly completely unexplored parameter space. In this talk, we’ll discuss the experimental requirements when searching for dark matter throughout the
mass range. We’ll also discuss recent R&D breakthroughs in athermal phonon sensor technology that will enable the newly funded DOE experiments SPICE and HeRALD, as well as the SuperCDMS experiment to search for dark matter in this range.

Location: Zoom Webinar
Webinar ID: 938 4556 6700
https://berkeley.zoom.us/j/93845566700

Location: virtual (zoom)

Speaker: Matt C. Pyle

Affiliation: UC Berkeley

Research Area: Astrophysics Nuclear Physics