TL;DR
This paper calculates atomic responses of argon and xenon to general dark matter-electron interactions, identifying new responses and setting exclusion limits based on experimental null results.
Contribution
It introduces four independent atomic responses to DM-electron interactions, three of which are identified for the first time, enhancing interpretation of detection experiments.
Findings
Four atomic responses to DM-electron interactions identified
Three responses are newly discovered and numerically significant
Set 90% confidence level exclusion limits on interaction strengths
Abstract
In the leading paradigm of modern cosmology, about 80% of our Universe's matter content is in the form of hypothetical, as yet undetected particles. These do not emit or absorb radiation at any observable wavelengths, and therefore constitute the so-called Dark Matter (DM) component of the Universe. Detecting the particles forming the Milky Way DM component is one of the main challenges for astroparticle physics and basic science in general. One promising way to achieve this goal is to search for rare DM-electron interactions in low-background deep underground detectors. Key to the interpretation of this search is the response of detectors' materials to elementary DM-electron interactions defined in terms of electron wave functions' overlap integrals. In this work, we compute the response of atomic argon and xenon targets used in operating DM search experiments to general, so far…
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