Searching for Dark Clumps with Gravitational-Wave Detectors
Sebastian Baum, Michael A. Fedderke, and Peter W. Graham

TL;DR
This paper evaluates the potential of gravitational-wave detectors, especially at microhertz frequencies, to detect dark matter clumps in the Solar System, highlighting the effects of gravitational and possible fifth-force interactions on detection rates.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the detectability of dark matter clumps using current and proposed GW detectors, including the impact of hypothetical fifth forces on detection prospects.
Findings
Purely gravitational transits detectable once every 20 years for certain clump masses.
Higher frequency GW detectors can detect smaller clumps with higher rates.
A strong fifth-force could increase detection rates to several per year for asteroid-mass dark objects.
Abstract
Dark compact objects ("clumps") transiting the Solar System exert accelerations on the test masses (TM) in a gravitational-wave (GW) detector. We reexamine the detectability of these clump transits in a variety of current and future GW detectors, operating over a broad range of frequencies. TM accelerations induced by clump transits through the inner Solar System have frequency content around Hz. Some of us [arXiv:2112.11431] recently proposed a GW detection concept with Hz sensitivity, based on asteroid-to-asteroid ranging. From the detailed sensitivity projection for this concept, we find both analytically and in simulation that purely gravitational clump-matter interactions would yield one detectable transit every yrs, if clumps with mass saturate the dark-matter (DM) density. Other (proposed) GW detectors using local…
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