In the early 1980s, axions and WIMPs were identified as promising dark matter candidates. The last forty years have seen a spectacularly successful experimental program attempting to discover the WIMPs, with sensitivity that has by now improved by many orders of magnitude compared to the earliest results. The parallel program to search for axions has made less progress and has reached the necessary sensitivity only over a very limited mass range. However, progress has recently accelerated, with the invention of many new axion detection techniques that may eventually provide a definitive answer to the question of whether the dark matter is made of axions. I will review some of these new developments with emphasis on Fermilab’s program, including ADMX-G2 and Broadband Reflector Experiment for Axion Detection (BREAD).
| Building: | West Hall |
|---|---|
| Event Type: | Workshop / Seminar |
| Tags: | Physics, Science |
| Source: | Happening @ Michigan from HEP - Astro Seminars, Department of Physics |
Events
Featured
Apr
18
Saturday Morning Physics | The Science of Physicist Jens Zorn's Art
Multiple U-M Faculty Speakers
10:30 AM
170 & 182
Weiser Hall
Upcoming
Apr
14
Applied Physics | Assumptions of Physics: A new principled approach to the foundations of physics
Dr.CHRISTINE AIDALA, Professor of Physics, University of Michigan.
12:00 PM
340
West Hall
Apr
14
CM-AMO Seminar | Mapping Plasma Electric Fields with Quantum-Coherent Rydberg Atoms
Mykhailo Vorobiov (College of William & Mary)
4:00 PM
340
West Hall
Apr
15
Department Colloquium | The Harmony of Quantum Scattering Amplitudes
Zvi Bern (UCLA)
3:00 PM
340
West Hall
