Coherent scattering and macroscopic coherence: Implications for neutrino, dark matter and axion detection
Evgeny Akhmedov, Giorgio Arcadi, Manfred Lindner, Stefan Vogl

TL;DR
This paper investigates whether macroscopic coherence can enhance neutrino and dark matter detection cross sections, finding that it can increase detection rates for certain neutrino interactions but not for typical dark matter scenarios.
Contribution
The study demonstrates that macroscopic coherence effects can significantly boost neutrino detection via magnetic moments and opens new possibilities for low-energy neutrino detection, contrasting with suppressed weak interaction processes.
Findings
Coherence can enhance neutrino magnetic moment detection rates.
Weak interaction processes are suppressed under macroscopic coherence.
Potential to detect neutrinos in the 100 eV to keV energy range.
Abstract
We study the question of whether coherent neutrino scattering can occur on macroscopic scales, leading to a significant increase of the detection cross section. We concentrate on radiative neutrino scattering on atomic electrons (or on free electrons in a conductor). Such processes can be coherent provided that the net electron recoil momentum, i.e. the momentum transfer from the neutrino minus the momentum of the emitted photon, is sufficiently small. The radiative processes is an attractive possibility as the energy of the emitted photons can be as large as the momentum transfer to the electron system and therefore the problem of detecting extremely low energy recoils can be avoided. The requirement of macroscopic coherence severely constrains the phase space available for the scattered particle and the emitted photon. We show that in the case of the scattering mediated by the usual…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
