Digging into Axion Physics with (Baby)IAXO
T. Dafni, J. Galan

TL;DR
This paper reviews the motivation, design, and potential of the IAXO and BabyIAXO experiments for detecting axions and axion-like particles, highlighting their unprecedented sensitivity in dark matter searches.
Contribution
It introduces the design and scientific goals of the IAXO and BabyIAXO experiments, emphasizing their innovative features and international collaboration efforts.
Findings
IAXO will have unparalleled sensitivity to axions.
BabyIAXO serves as a prototype to test key technologies.
The experiments aim to explore new regions of axion parameter space.
Abstract
Dark Matter searches have been ongoing for three decades; the lack of a positive discovery of the main candidate, the WIMP, after dedicated efforts, has put axions and axion-like-particles in the spotlight. The three main techniques employed to search for them complement each other well in covering a wide range in the parameter space defined by the axion decay constant and the axion mass. The International AXion Observatory (IAXO) is an international collaboration planning to build the fourth generation axion helioscope, with an unparalleled expected sensitivity and discovery potential. The distinguishing characteristic of IAXO is that it will feature an axion-specific magnet, with a large axion-sensitive cross-section, and will be equipped with x-ray focusing devices and detectors that have been developed for axion physics. In this paper, we review aspects that motivate IAXO and its…
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