论文标题
在稀有核同位素加速器设施上搜索类似轴突的颗粒的前景
Search Prospects for Axion-like Particles at Rare Nuclear Isotope Accelerator Facilities
论文作者
论文摘要
我们提出了一种新型的实验方案,称为DAMSA(在加速器上进行了垃圾箱生产的原住民物质搜索),以搜索黑区域颗粒,使用稀有的核同位素加速器设施,这些设施可提供高流量质子束以产生大量稀有的核同位素。梁的高强度性质可以研究黑暗区域的颗粒,包括轴突样颗粒(阿尔卑斯山)和深色光子。相比之下,它们的典型光束能量不足以产生背景,例如由次级电荷颗粒产生的中微子。然后将DAMSA的探测器立即放置在质子梁垃圾场的下游,以最大化黑暗区域颗粒的迅速衰减信号,这些信号通常具有挑战性,在其他较长基线的其他梁降点型实验中探测,以巨大的束相关的中子(BRN)为代价。我们证明,如果信号伴随多个相关的可见粒子,则可以显着抑制BRN。作为一个示例物理病例,我们考虑与标准模型光子相互作用及其在罕见的核同位素设施中实施的DAMSA的双光子衰减信号,类似于韩国正在建造的在线实验的稀有同位素加速器复合物。我们表明,检测器与ALP生产转储的紧密距离使探测现有实验从未探索过的ALP参数空间的高质量区域。
We propose a novel experimental scheme, called DAMSA (Dump-produced Aboriginal Matter Searches at an Accelerator), for searching for dark-sector particles, using rare nuclear isotope accelerator facilities that provide high-flux proton beams to produce a large number of rare nuclear isotopes. The high-intensity nature of their beams enables the investigation of dark-sector particles, including axion-like particles (ALPs) and dark photons. By contrast, their typical beam energies are not large enough to produce the backgrounds such as neutrinos resulting from secondary charged particles. The detector of DAMSA is then placed immediate downstream of the proton beam dump to maximize the prompt decay signals of dark-sector particles, which are often challenging to probe in other beam-dump-type experiments featuring a longer baseline, at the expense of an enormous amount of the beam-related neutron (BRN) background. We demonstrate that BRN can be significantly suppressed if the signal accompanies multiple, correlated visible particles in the final state. As an example physics case, we consider ALPs interacting with the Standard Model photon and their diphoton decay signal at DAMSA implemented at a rare nuclear isotope facility similar to the Rare isotope Accelerator complex for ON-line experiment under construction in South Korea. We show that the close proximity of the detector to the ALP production dump makes it possible to probe a high-mass region of ALP parameter space that the existing experiments have never explored.