iDMEu Town Hall at TAUP (Vienna) and online
Seminar Room 1 (SR1)
University of Vienna
Zoom Meeting ID and password:
Meeting ID: 623 9979 0243
Passcode: 10000000
Introduction to the meeting:
This is the first town hall meeting of the Initiative for Dark Matter in Europe and beyond (iDMEu), a JENA (Joint ECFA-NuPECC-APPEC) activity to bring together researchers from different communities searching for dark matter.
It takes place on the last day of the XVIII International Conference on Topics in Astoparticle and Underground Physics (TAUP2023), at the University of Vienna (in Seminar Room 1, see here) and online on Zoom.
In this kick-off, we will have three talks of general interest on experimental and theoretical directions. During this town hall meeting, we will also present the virtual platform for the dark matter meta-repository developed by the organizers and Early Career curators.
There will be plenty of time for discussion after the talks, as well as space to talk about the feedback on the virtual platform.
Coffee will be available in the meeting room prior to starting the meeting, and we will open the virtual room at 14:15 for anyone who may want to have informal discussions prior to the talks starting at 14:30. The coffee and the room hosting are possible thanks to the sponsorship of ECFA, APPEC and NuPECC.
Live notes:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1vL7p6tU_wgiUz-_3E4Tby598L1XqSGsNVSKvgaNhJck/edit?usp=sharing
Alejandro Ibarra
Andreas Haungs
Andrzej Hryczuk
Anna Bertolini
Aoife Bharucha
Aryaman Bhutani
Babette Dobrich
Béla Majorovits
Caterina Doglioni
Chingam Fong
Claire Adam Bourdarios
Colin Moore
Daniel Bemmerer
David Sadek
David Schaich
Diego Blas
Dominik Fuchs
Eniko Regos
Federica Petricca
Federico von der Pahlen
Felix Wagner
Francesca Calore
Giorgio Arcadi
Giorgio Del Castello
Giuliano Gustavino
Hannah Elizabeth Herde
herbert rohringer
Hermann Klosius
Hiroyuki Sekiya
Ian Shipsey
James Frost
Jose Cembranos
José I. Crespo-Anadón
José Matias
Julia Djuvsland
Jutta Schnabel
Ke Han
kenji kadota
Kimberly Palladino
Lailin Xu
Leszek Roszkowski
Loida Rosado
Loredana Gastaldo
Lorenzo Pagnanini
LUCIEN HEURTIER
Marcin Kuźniak
Marco Cirelli
Marek Lewitowicz
Margarita Kaznacheeva
Marie-Helene Genest
María Benito
María Luisa Sarsa
Masayuki Wada
Matthew Stukel
Michelangelo Traina
Mikhail Smirnov
Moaaz Elwan
Nicolao Fornengo
Nicole Bell
Norma SANCHEZ
Patrick Koppenburg
Philippe Simonis
Pueh Leng Tan
Rituparna Maji
rocio vilar
Samir Banik
Sebastian Baum
Seodong Shin
Shubham Gupta
Silvia Scorza
Sohaib Hassan
Spyros Argyropoulos
Susana Cebrian
Tarek Saab
Thomas Ward
Torsten Bringmann
Vasile Mihai Ghete
Vitaly Kudryavtsev
Weigeng Peng
Wladyslaw Henryk Trzaska
Yufeng Li
- +17
iDMEu town hall @ TAUP - 01/09/2023
Introductory talks
Federica Petricca - iDMEu goals
Main goal: building a permanent platform to discuss DM among different communities via:
- Website
- Town-hall meetings (like this one)
Additional goal: help build a coherent story on DM for different audiences
Andreas Haungs - JENA
JENA = Joint Activities of ECFA, NuPECC and APPEC
JENAS = Seminar with members of all different community
Expressions of interest on different topics beyond iDMEu: GW, ML optimisation, Neutron EDM…all recognised as overarching community initiatives.
Recent activities:
- JENA Computing Workshop in Bologna, June 2023 → working groups
- In the next few days/weeks information will be sent around on how to join the working groups
- Midterm evaluation of APPEC roadmap (2021-2023), as a dynamic roadmap, identification of new topics and priorities.
iDMEu website talks - part 1
Marco Cirelli - website / virtual platform
Preliminary website (beta version) at: http://nectarclient.co.uk/idmeu/
Curators: undergraduate students who do a project (generally review + a hands-on part) and postdocs devoting part of their time to maintaining website
Functionalities:
- Groups and communities
- Searchable tables containing information about experiments and numerical simulations
- Suggestions on tables:
- Make it possible to jump within the table, as tables are very long
- A visual calendar where the start and end dates of each experiments (especially the future ones) would be great to have a global view of what's coming and when.
- Q: What are the “main publications”? Most recent publication is useful because it’s not necessarily easy to find, make sure that you cover all different papers.
- For ID, TDR (no results)
- Reason for not having them: there are too many, and there are many papers by theorists…could be automated, needs some volunteers to help out.
- For DD, results of a given run / new data releases. Only publications by the collaboration, no reanalyses.
- For ID, TDR (no results)
- Q: what is the backend of the paper? How do you make sure this is the latest paper?
- We don’t, we have students putting in information from the tables.
- Important disclaimer: not yet reviewed/validated by experiments, the collaborations can say “you are missing this piece of information”, for now we only have disclaimers.
- Q: isn’t the website also a repository for data from various experiments?
- Not in scope at the moment, because other repositories exist. DM hub? We don’t want to duplicate efforts, there are already such repositories (e.g. a CR database, DM Direct).
- Can add a specific link of data catalogues.
- Comment: in reading papers from the experiment, there are many common devices (e.g. photomultipliers, sensors…). Can we have a section about main technologies of the experiments, and explain how they work?
- This could be interesting, see forum as well.
- Suggestions on tables:
- Resources:
- Outreach resources for different audiences
- Lectures
- DM primer (what to read when you start)
Scientific talks
Giorgio Arcadi - overview of DM theory
Very large DM landscape (couplings/mass)
What does a DM physicist/phenomenologist wish for?
- Viable interface between theory and experimental outcome
- Combine experimental information with DM production
- Use new experiments
“Usual” complementarity: ID, DD and colliders, some discussion points.
Topic 1: examples of interplay, with complications.
- Higgs portal: ‘vector DM’ collider results ported to DD plane leads to different lines.
- Simplified vs realistic models can give different results, widely different in case simplified models are not theoretically consistent (e.g. divergences)
- Realistic models may have degrees of freedom that alter the message of the plot, much stronger or much weaker. Compromise solution: add lines for realistic models.
Topic 2: Impact of relic density on experimental constraints
- Considering a popular scenario of freeze-out for invisible width of Higgs, what are the allowed points within the collider result (which does not impose a relic constraint)? Distribution of points does not follow the collider results.
- However, freeze-out/thermal is not the only way: new work also including freeze-in.
Q&A
Q (Georgia Karagiorgi (?)): As a direct DM experimentalist, it looks like there are ideas of models that come up and then they aren’t mentioned again - cycles of popularities, how do we follow up?
A: DD is very good at constraining many models, difficult to have single models that are fully constrained or fully open, maybe one could make a list.
Comment (Marco Cirelli): at the moment, most popular: sub-GeV for electron scattering, axions.
Q: Clarify the DD/collider invisible Higgs plots and the assumptions.
A: the way the plot is made is assuming that all DM is contributing to the Higgs invisible width, so you can set a constraint on DM based on the constraint on invisible Higgs decay. Follow up offline.
Ian Shipsey - ECFA Detector Roadmap
How the ECFA detector roadmap can help answer a number of mysteries of our universe through discoveries? Data-driven era when we need instruments for answers.
- Identify main technology areas needed for instruments in the next decade in ECFA
- Roadmap document: Task Forces for technology area + training: propose a time-ordered detector R&D programme that wouldn’t otherwise be achievable
Long-term planning starting with 2019 European Strategy Update, now creating Detector R&D (DRD) collaborations where people commit to working on a given topic, similar to general conditions for execution of CERN experiments.
DRD areas relevant to DM:
- Gaseous detectors
- Photon detectors
- Liquid detectors → see next talk
- Quantum detector
Organization & resources for a DRD collaboration: see slide, important points and timescales there.
Quantum and emerging technologies = rapidly emerging areas of technology development to study fundamental physics and many DM models. → covered in DRD5.
Q: how to get involved at this stage?
A: DRDs tried to contact the communities, so to get in touch find the webpage for each of the DRDs and contact the organisers (a new slide will be added). Next talk will have specific examples.
Anyssa Navrer-Agasson - ECFA R&D: liquid detectors
Liquid detectors as use case, what has been going on in this area.
Physics: neutrinos, dark matter, neutrinoless double-beta decays…
Technologies: liquid scintillator, noble liquid, water cherenkov…
Different physics goals, common challenges:
- Lower energy thresholds, improvement of energy resolution, reduction of backgrounds
- Common to all: scalability
Liquid detector R&D: four different groups with subgroups, example, Charge readout is the group with pixel charge & light as one of the subgroups
Liquid detectors for DM: Argon/Neon/Xenon, examples of how they are used and what they access (parallel between DM noble liquid TPCs for direct DM detection and neutrino LAr TPCs for indirect dark sector access), and what the main issues are especially in scalability.
Many R&D areas for liquid detector with synergies between science topics, will create a network of R&D facilities and shared resources. Links to participate are on the slides.
→ can iDMEu have the link to help advertise?
A: links should be on the website - people can follow them and get to a place where there is information about status. Initially there was one place to find everything, but then with time things got a bit disjoint and not everything in the same place.
Early page, with everything: https://indico.cern.ch/event/957057/page/27294-implementation-of-the-ecfa-detector-rd-roadmap but the links are not the most up to date there → ECFA detector leadership will make one page only, and that is the page to link. There is one slide by
[idea for website: add a “roadmaps for DM” page including APPEC, European Strategy document, DRD. Help with this. ]
Q: what happens in the Selenium case?
A: this has to do with e/hole pair creation, but would have to look it up
Q: enhanced photosensitivity for liquid chambers, where does it help? Discrimination, or charge signals?
A: Both, can help also in improving energy resolutions
Deborah Pinna - Snowmass complementarity
Snowmass: similar process to European Strategy Update but broader in scope (all of particle physics, including astrophysics, neutrino and intensity frontier), giving input to prioritisation in the next decade.
Complementarity effort: see report https://arxiv.org/abs/2210.01770 and short version https://arxiv.org/abs/2211.07027, containing:
- Roadmaps (= more of a wishlist) for different types of DM experiments to discover DM in the next decade.
- Discovery scenarios where experiments are complementary
Q: how do you identify priorities when you have budget restrictions?
A: US-based answers - there are some priorities that were highlighted and scenarios of what could be cut. But in any case we need experiments that are complementary to each other.
Comment (CD): going in with a united front and highlighting good things of other experiments in addition to good things of one’s own experiment will lead to better funding results than only highlighting one experiment at a time.
Q: What if I don’t have enough money for everything, what do we do? We can face this problem, and it’s difficult - prioritising means you choose. From the theory reviewer point of view then it’s hard…
A: there are experiments that do more than what they were designed for (e.g. LHCb and dark sectors, CMS triggering for GeV-level…), so think about this before descoping experiments?
Comment (CD): this can include the discussion of “popularity contest” for themes
A: we have an infinite parameter space, we want to do everything in every way. So how do we show that we aren’t asking for everything?
Comment (CD): prioritisation can be helped by theory community: what theory is robust && promising and we should look there? And how do we do the most things possible with one experiment?
Deborah: let’s look at broader picture, general experiments.
Federica: it’s true that we don’t have funding for everything, but we need to go in with a collaborative mindset rather than with an exclusively competitive.
iDMEu website talks - part 2
Caterina Doglioni - iDMEu forum
Interactive session on why/if an online forum would be useful, see slides.
Results of the polls:
Why would(n't) you use a DM internet forum?
8
Would be nice to openly discuss hot topics timely for people who do not use twitter.
To ask questions
would need to make sure it is established, otherwise waste of time... --> where ist the threshold for "established", how to measure this? How do people know this?
I would but not sure how sustainable it will be since forums seem to be losing popularity in the Internet and young people may not engage
I could use it, just now I don’t know.
To find answers to questions I might have 😊
DM stackoverflow 😊
To ask questions
What forum topics would you suggest and what comments would you have on the existing topics?
3
like "Arxiv of the day", which will be completely deleted after a week/month?
create platform for students and postdocs to discuss their experience on daily work of the experiments as help for choosing next job
Seeking explanation from experts