Excess Electronic Recoil Events in XENON1T
E. Aprile, J. Aalbers, F. Agostini, M. Alfonsi, L. Althueser, F. D., Amaro, V. C. Antochi, E. Angelino, J. R. Angevaare, F. Arneodo, D. Barge, L., Baudis, B. Bauermeister, L. Bellagamba, M. L. Benabderrahmane, T. Berger, A., Brown, E. Brown, S. Bruenner, G. Bruno, R. Budnik

TL;DR
The XENON1T experiment observed an excess of low-energy electronic recoil events, which could indicate new physics such as solar axions, an enhanced neutrino magnetic moment, or bosonic dark matter, but could also be explained by tritium contamination.
Contribution
This paper presents the first detailed analysis of an excess in low-energy electronic recoil events in XENON1T data, exploring multiple new physics explanations and background hypotheses.
Findings
Excess observed at 2-3 keV with 3.4σ significance for solar axions.
Neutrino magnetic moment favored at 3.2σ, with a specific confidence interval.
Bosonic dark matter peak at 2.3 keV with 3.0σ global significance.
Abstract
We report results from searches for new physics with low-energy electronic recoil data recorded with the XENON1T detector. With an exposure of 0.65 t-y and an unprecedentedly low background rate of events/(t y keV) between 1 and 30 keV, the data enables sensitive searches for solar axions, an enhanced neutrino magnetic moment, and bosonic dark matter. An excess over known backgrounds is observed at low energies and most prominent between 2 and 3 keV. The solar axion model has a 3.4 significance, and a 3D 90% confidence surface is reported for axion couplings to electrons, photons, and nucleons. This surface is inscribed in the cuboid defined by , , and , and excludes either or . The neutrino magnetic moment…
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