The first search for bosonic super-WIMPs with masses up to 1 MeV/c$^2$ with GERDA
GERDA collaboration: M. Agostini, A. M. Bakalyarov, M. Balata, I., Barabanov, L. Baudis, C. Bauer, E. Bellotti, S. Belogurov, A. Bettini, L., Bezrukov, D. Borowicz, E. Bossio, V. Bothe, V. Brudanin, R. Brugnera, A., Caldwell, C. Cattadori, A. Chernogorov, T. Comellato

TL;DR
This paper reports the first search for bosonic super-WIMPs as keV-scale dark matter candidates using GERDA, setting new constraints on their couplings with no detection of a signal.
Contribution
It introduces the first experimental search for bosonic super-WIMPs with masses up to 1 MeV/c$^2$ using GERDA, providing the most stringent constraints on their couplings.
Findings
No dark matter signal was observed.
Established the most stringent limits on super-WIMP couplings above 120 keV/c$^2$.
Set new upper bounds on axion-like particles and dark photons.
Abstract
We present the first search for bosonic super-WIMPs as keV-scale dark matter candidates performed with the GERDA experiment. GERDA is a neutrinoless double-beta decay experiment which operates high-purity germanium detectors enriched in Ge in an ultra-low background environment at the Laboratori Nazionali del Gran Sasso (LNGS) of INFN in Italy. Searches were performed for pseudoscalar and vector particles in the mass region from 60 keV/c to 1 MeV/c. No evidence for a dark matter signal was observed, and the most stringent constraints on the couplings of super-WIMPs with masses above 120 keV/c have been set. As an example, at a mass of 150 keV/c the most stringent direct limits on the dimensionless couplings of axion-like particles and dark photons to electrons of and at 90% credible interval,…
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.
