Solar Neutrinos as a Signal and Background in Direct-Detection Experiments Searching for Sub-GeV Dark Matter With Electron Recoils
Rouven Essig, Mukul Sholapurkar, Tien-Tien Yu

TL;DR
This paper investigates how solar neutrinos impact low-energy electron recoil signals in direct-detection dark matter experiments, highlighting their role as both a background and a potential signal for new physics.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of solar neutrino interactions in semiconductor and xenon detectors, exploring their detectability and implications for dark matter searches and neutrino physics.
Findings
Neutrinos become a significant background for dark matter-electron searches at exposures >1-10 kg-years in Si and Ge.
B-8 neutrino coherent scattering can be observed with ~2 sigma significance at specific exposures in Xe, Ge, and Si.
Detecting lower-energy neutrinos depends on ionization efficiency and requires large exposures, especially in Xe.
Abstract
Direct-detection experiments sensitive to low-energy electron recoils from sub-GeV dark matter (DM) interactions will also be sensitive to solar neutrinos via coherent neutrino-nucleus scattering (CNS), since the recoiling nucleus can produce a small ionization signal. Solar neutrinos constitute both an interesting signal in their own right and a potential background to a DM search that cannot be controlled or reduced by improved shielding, material purification and handling, or improved detector design. We explore these two possibilities in detail for semiconductor (Si and Ge) and Xe targets, considering several possibilities for the unmeasured ionization efficiency at low energies. For DM-electron-scattering searches, neutrinos start being an important background for exposures larger than ~1-10 kg-years in Si and Ge, and for exposures larger than ~0.1-1 kg-year in Xe. For the…
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