14–16 Nov 2022
Online
America/New_York timezone

New Constraints on the Profiles and Masses of Dark Matter and Cosmic Neutrinos through Precision Astrometry and Quantum Sensors

14 Nov 2022, 17:30
15m
Online

Online

Speaker

Yu-Dai Tsai (University of California, Irvine)

Description

We derive purely gravitational constraints on dark matter and cosmic neutrino profiles in the solar system using asteroid (101955) Bennu. We focus on Bennu because of its extensive tracking data and high-fidelity trajectory modeling resulting from the OSIRIS-REx mission. We find that the local density of dark matter is bound by $\rho_{\rm DM} < 3.3\times 10^{-15}\;\rm kg/m^3 \simeq 6\times10^6\,\bar{\rho}_{\rm DM}$, in the vicinity of $\sim 1.1$ au (where $\bar{\rho}_{\rm DM}\simeq 0.3\;\rm GeV/cm^3$). We show that high-precision tracking data of solar system objects can constrain cosmic neutrino overdensities relative to the Standard Model prediction $\bar{n}_{\nu}$, at the level of $\eta\equiv n_\nu/\bar{n}_{\nu}< 1.7 \times 10^{11}(0.1 \;{\rm eV}/m_\nu)$ (Saturn), comparable to the existing bounds from KATRIN and other previous labora-tory experiments (with $m_\nu$ the neutrino mass). These local bounds have interesting implica-tions for existing and future direct-detection experiments. Our constraints apply to all dark matter candidates but are particularly meaningful for scenarios including solar halos, stellar basins, and axion miniclusters, which predict overdensities in the solar system. Furthermore, introducing a DM-SM long-range fifth force with a strength $\tilde{\alpha}_D$ times stronger than gravity, Bennu can set a constraint on $\rho_{\rm DM} < \bar{\rho}_{\rm DM}\left(6 \times 10^6/\tilde{\alpha}_D\right)$. These constraints can be improved in the future as the accuracy of tracking data improves, observational arcs increase, and more missions visit asteroids. I will con-clude with a proposal using space quantum sensors to probe ultralight dark matter close to the Sun.
This talk is mainly based on arXiv:2112.07674 (Nature Astronomy, 2022) and arXiv:2210.03749.

Author

Yu-Dai Tsai (University of California, Irvine)

Co-author

Presentation materials