Decoherence as a way to measure extremely soft collisions with dark matter
C. Jess Riedel, Itay Yavin

TL;DR
This paper explores how matter interferometers can detect extremely soft and medium-range dark matter interactions through decoherence effects, potentially revealing new dark sectors inaccessible to current methods.
Contribution
It introduces the idea of using mesoscopic superpositions to detect very soft, medium-range dark matter interactions and proposes experimental setups to observe sidereal variations in decoherence rates.
Findings
Medium-range elastic DM interactions cause detectable decoherence.
Next-generation interferometers can probe new dark matter parameter spaces.
Sidereal variation in decoherence signals distinguishes interstellar DM from terrestrial noise.
Abstract
A new frontier in the search for dark matter (DM) is based on the idea of detecting the decoherence caused by DM scattering against a mesoscopic superposition of normal matter. Such superpositions are uniquely sensitive to very small momentum transfers from new particles and forces, especially DM with a mass below 100 MeV. Here we investigate what sorts of dark sectors are inaccessible with existing methods but would induce noticeable decoherence in the next generation of matter interferometers. We show that very soft, but medium range (0.1 nm - 1 m) elastic interactions between nuclei and DM are particularly suitable. We construct toy models for such interactions, discuss existing constraints, and delineate the expected sensitivity of forthcoming experiments. The first hints of DM in these devices would appear as small variations in the anomalous decoherence rate with a period of…
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