Time-integrated directional detection of dark matter
Ciaran A. J. O'Hare, Bradley J. Kavanagh, Anne M. Green

TL;DR
This paper investigates how time integration affects the ability of directional dark matter detectors to identify anisotropic signals, showing that key advantages are preserved even without event-by-event directional information.
Contribution
It demonstrates that time-integrated directional detection retains essential directional information, reducing the need for detector rotation and providing insights into background rejection and sensitivity.
Findings
Time integration preserves a preferred recoil direction.
Directional detection remains effective without detector rotation.
No neutrino floor in time-integrated directional experiments.
Abstract
The analysis of signals in directional dark matter (DM) detectors typically assumes that the directions of nuclear recoils can be measured in the Galactic rest frame. However, this is not possible with all directional detection technologies. In nuclear emulsions, for example, the recoil events must be detected and measured after the exposure time of the experiment. Unless the entire detector is mounted and rotated with the sidereal day, the recoils cannot be reoriented in the Galactic rest frame. We examine the effect of this `time integration' on the primary goals of directional detection, namely: (1) confirming that the recoils are anisotropic; (2) measuring the median recoil direction to confirm their Galactic origin; and (3) probing below the neutrino floor. We show that after time integration the DM recoil distribution retains a preferred direction and is distinct from that of…
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