Search for magnetic monopoles with the MoEDAL prototype trapping detector in 8 TeV proton-proton collisions at the LHC
MoEDAL Collaboration: B. Acharya, J. Alexandre, K. Bendtz, P. Benes,, J. Bernab\'eu, M. Campbell, S. Cecchini, J. Chwastowski, A. Chatterjee, M. de, Montigny, D. Derendarz, A. De Roeck, J. R. Ellis, M. Fairbairn, D. Felea, M., Frank, D. Frekers, C. Garcia, G. Giacomelli

TL;DR
This paper reports on a search for magnetic monopoles using the MoEDAL detector at the LHC, setting new mass and cross-section limits and employing two detection techniques with no monopoles observed.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel application of the MoEDAL trapping detector with a 160 kg prototype at 8 TeV collisions, establishing new limits on monopole production and mass at the LHC.
Findings
No magnetic monopoles detected in the samples.
Set new mass limits for monopoles up to 3500 GeV.
Established model-dependent cross-section limits for monopole production.
Abstract
The MoEDAL experiment is designed to search for magnetic monopoles and other highly-ionising particles produced in high-energy collisions at the LHC. The largely passive MoEDAL detector, deployed at Interaction Point 8 on the LHC ring, relies on two dedicated direct detection techniques. The first technique is based on stacks of nuclear-track detectors with surface area 18 m, sensitive to particle ionisation exceeding a high threshold. These detectors are analysed offline by optical scanning microscopes. The second technique is based on the trapping of charged particles in an array of roughly 800 kg of aluminium samples. These samples are monitored offline for the presence of trapped magnetic charge at a remote superconducting magnetometer facility. We present here the results of a search for magnetic monopoles using a 160 kg prototype MoEDAL trapping detector exposed to 8 TeV…
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