Understanding WIMP-baryon interactions with direct detection: A Roadmap
Vera Gluscevic, Annika H. G. Peter

TL;DR
This paper evaluates the ability of current and future dark matter direct detection experiments to identify the underlying WIMP-baryon interaction operators, considering various WIMP masses, interaction types, and experimental setups.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive simulation-based analysis of operator identification prospects and highlights the importance of combining different experiments for improved sensitivity.
Findings
Success depends on WIMP mass, interaction type, and experimental energy window.
Generation 2 experiments can almost guarantee success for WIMPs above 200 GeV.
Combining multiple experiments significantly improves operator discrimination.
Abstract
We study prospects of dark-matter direct-detection searches for probing non-relativistic effective theory for WIMP-baryon scattering. We simulate a large set of noisy recoil-energy spectra for different scattering scenarios (beyond the standard momentum-independent contact interaction), for Generation 2 and futuristic experiments. We analyze these simulations and quantify the probability of successfully identifying the operator governing the scattering, if a WIMP signal is observed. We find that the success rate depends on a combination of factors: the WIMP mass, the mediator mass, the type of interaction, and the experimental energy window. For example, for a 20 GeV WIMP, Generation 2 is only likely to identify the right operator if the interaction is Coulomb-like, and is unlikely to do so in any other case. For a WIMP with a mass of 200 GeV or higher, success is almost guaranteed. We…
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