Periodic Reporting for period 5 - AxScale (Axions and relatives across different mass scales)
Período documentado: 2024-05-01 hasta 2025-10-31
Using two complementary experimental lever-arms, the AxScale project pursued the answer to this question. The prime example of a well-motivated, weakly interacting particle of comparably low mass is the axion. It could make up all the Dark Matter but is also connected to another fundamental mystery in particle physics.
In AxScale the scope of the project was to search in a comprehensive way for axions and related new physics particles at two complementary experiments: At the NA62 experiment at CERN, weakly coupled new physics such as axions, were searched in data taken in beam-dump mode and in data from ultra-rare decays of a Kaon. If the axion were to be very light-weight and make up the Dark Matter, its mass could be determined through a dedicated experiment, called RADES. The AxScale project thus stood out by the fact that it could test new physics in two vastly differing and independent experiments and thereby partially cross-check its own findings.
For RADES, the project can be grouped in two periods: In the first period, at CERN, we made parasitic use of available infrastructure needed in axion Dark Matter search experiments: Cryogenics and strong-field magnets. We developed a number of innovative new cavity geometries, and among other results, published results of the first axion Dark Matter search employing high-temperature superconducting tapes on the cavity surfaces. In the second period, at the Max Planck Institute for Physics (MPP) in Garching, two dedicated labs were equipped and set-up with a dilution fridge and a 12T magnet. This enabled the research team to expand their R&D and work towards connecting axion dark matter searches with novel quantum technologies. During the time at MPP, the RADES experiment evolved into a fully-fledged collaboration, counting on international, interdisciplinary expertise to scale the experiment to its sensitivity beyond the state-of-the art.
In both AxScale sub-projects, results were disseminated widely through articles in popular science magazines (such as “Spectrum der Wissenschaft”), interactive set-ups at “open day events” and events targeted at girl’s in STEM.
Within RADES, thanks to AxScale, a number of experimental campaigns were performed, and analysis results have been published in parameter regions thus far untackled by other experiments, especially in the axion post-inflationary regime. RADES published the first full axion search result employing high-temperature superconductors as radiofrequency cavity coating.
In summary: the detection of an axion or similar fundamental new physics particles would be a ground-breaking discovery, shedding light on the theory beyond the Standard Model of Particle Physics. Potentially this could also be connected to solving the puzzle to understand the nature of Dark Matter. With the research conducted in AxScale, a corner-stone has been laid for a possible discovery: A plethora of data taken towards the end of the action remains to be analyzed. A novel discovery in those data would constitute a Nobel-winning breakthrough in in Particle Physics with vast implications for Cosmology and Astrophysics.