18–23 Aug 2025
University of California at Santa Cruz
US/Pacific timezone

Direct deflection of Millicharged radiation

Not scheduled
20m
University of California at Santa Cruz

University of California at Santa Cruz

Non-SUSY extensions of the Standard Model Non-SUSY extensions of the Standard Model

Speaker

Erwin Tanin (Stanford)

Description

Millicharged particles are generic in theories of dark sectors. A cosmic or local abundance of them may be produced by the early universe, stellar environments, or the decay or annihilation of dark matter/dark energy. Furthermore, if such particles are light, these production channels result in a background of millicharged radiation. We show that light-shining-through-wall experiments employing superconducting RF cavities can also be used as ``direct deflection" experiments to search for this relativistic background. The millicharged plasma is first subjected to an oscillating electromagnetic field of a driven cavity, which causes charge separation in the form of charge and current perturbations. In turn, these perturbations can propagate outwards and resonantly excite electromagnetic fields in a well-shielded cavity placed nearby, enabling detection. We estimate that future versions of the existing Dark SRF experiment can probe orders of magnitude of currently unexplored parameter space, including millicharges produced from the Sun, the cosmic neutrino background, or other mechanisms that generate a thermal abundance with energy density as small as $10^{-4}$ that of the cosmic microwave background.

Authors

Asher Berlin (Fermilab) Erwin Tanin (Stanford) Harikrishnan Ramani (Delaware) Surjeet Rajendran (Johns Hopkins)

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