A Helioscope for Gravitationally Bound Millicharged Particles
Asher Berlin, Katelin Schutz

TL;DR
This paper proposes a novel detection method called 'direct deflection' for gravitationally bound millicharged particles emitted from the Sun, utilizing resonant circuits to enhance sensitivity to low-velocity particles and explore new parameter space.
Contribution
It introduces a new detection strategy for solar-bound millicharged particles using electromagnetic field distortions and resonant circuits, extending the search sensitivity to smaller couplings.
Findings
Proposed a resonant LC circuit setup for detection.
Can probe couplings an order of magnitude smaller than existing methods.
Operates effectively for millicharge masses from 100 meV to 100 eV.
Abstract
Particles may be emitted efficiently from the solar interior if they are sufficiently light and weakly coupled to the solar plasma. In a narrow region of phase space, they are emitted with velocities smaller than the escape velocity of the solar system, thereby populating a gravitationally bound density that can accumulate over the solar lifetime, referred to as a "solar basin." Detection strategies that can succeed in spite of (or even be enhanced by) the low particle velocities are therefore poised to explore new regions of parameter space when taking this solar population into account. Here we identify "direct deflection" as a powerful method to detect such a population of millicharged particles. This approach involves distorting the local flow of gravitationally bound millicharges with an oscillating electromagnetic field and measuring these distortions with a resonant LC circuit.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Dark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
