New Dark Matter Detectors using DNA or RNA for Nanometer Tracking
Andrzej Drukier, Katherine Freese, Alejandro Lopez, David Spergel,, Charles Cantor, George Church, Takeshi Sano

TL;DR
This paper proposes a novel dark matter detector using DNA or RNA strands to achieve nanometer-scale tracking of WIMP-induced nuclear recoils, enabling more precise detection at room temperature.
Contribution
It introduces a new detector concept utilizing nucleic acids for nanometer resolution tracking of WIMPs, combining molecular biology techniques with particle detection.
Findings
Achieves nanometer spatial resolution for recoil tracking.
Operates at room temperature with a low energy threshold.
Potentially smaller and cheaper than existing detectors.
Abstract
Weakly Interacting Massive Particles (WIMPs) may constitute most of the matter in the Universe. The ability to detect the directionality of recoil nuclei will considerably facilitate detection of WIMPs. In this paper we propose a novel type of dark matter detector: detectors made of DNA or RNA could provide nanometer resolution for tracking, an energy threshold of 0.5 keV, and can operate at room temperature. When a WIMP from the Galactic Halo elastically scatters off of a nucleus in the detector, the recoiling nucleus then traverses hundreds of strings of single stranded nucleic acids (ssNA) with known base sequences and severs ssNA strands along its trajectory. The location of the break can be identified by amplifying and identifying the segments of cut ssNA using techniques well known to biologists. Thus the path of the recoiling nucleus can be tracked to nanometer accuracy. In one…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena · Particle Detector Development and Performance
