Optimal Impedance Matching and Quantum Limits of Electromagnetic Axion and Hidden-Photon Dark Matter Searches
Saptarshi Chaudhuri, Kent Irwin, Peter W. Graham, Jeremy Mardon

TL;DR
This paper establishes the theoretical limits and optimal design principles for electromagnetic dark matter searches using single-moded, passive receivers, considering quantum noise and impedance matching, with implications for improving detection sensitivity.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive framework for optimizing single-moded dark matter detectors, including impedance matching, noise considerations, and the application of the Bode-Fano criterion, advancing the design of sensitive detection systems.
Findings
Bode-Fano criterion limits integrated sensitivity in reactive coupling.
Single-pole resonators are near-ideal for dark matter detection.
Optimized resonators outperform broadband receivers at practical frequencies.
Abstract
For the first time, we determine the properties of the optimal single-moded, linear, passive search for electromagnetic coupling to axion and hidden-photon dark matter, subject to the Standard Quantum Limit on phase-insensitive amplification. We establish the parameters that must be considered to determine the optimal search: the impedance match to dark matter; receiver frequency-response and tuning; irreducible noise sources; and prior information on the dark-matter signal. Using complex-power flow equations, we identify two categories of coupling to the dark-matter signal: radiative and reactive. We motivate a focus on single-moded reactive couplings, as receivers using solely radiative couplings are limited in sensitivity by mismatch with the dark-matter source impedance. We define integrated sensitivity as a figure of merit in comparing searches over a wide frequency range and show…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Orbital Angular Momentum in Optics
