Annual modulation of event rate and electron recoil energy in inelastic scattering direct detection experiments
Amin Aboubrahim, Lutz Althueser, Michael Klasen, Pran Nath and, Christian Weinheimer

TL;DR
This paper explores how annual modulation in event rate and electron recoil energy in inelastic dark matter scattering experiments can help distinguish between different theoretical explanations for observed excess events, enhancing analysis sensitivity.
Contribution
It extends the formalism of annual modulation to electronic recoils and inelastic dark matter, demonstrating improved discrimination power using combined rate and energy modulation data.
Findings
Annual modulation analysis improves model discrimination.
The method enhances parameter determination speed and precision.
Application to XENON1T and XENONnT data shows increased sensitivity.
Abstract
In 2020 the XENON1T experiment observed an excess of events with an electron recoil energy in the range of --keV. Such an excess can arise from a variety of sources such as solar axions or a neutrino magnetic moment, but also from inelastic scattering of dark matter off the xenon atoms. The recoil energy of the electron then depends on the mass difference of the dark particles. In this paper we show that the annual modulation of both the event rate and the electron recoil energy provide important additional information that allows to distinguish among different theoretical explanations of the signal. To this end, we first extend the formalism of annual modulation to electronic recoils, inelastic dark matter scattering and the electron recoil energy. We then study a concrete theoretical model with two Dirac fermions and a dark photon. We take into account all relevant…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena · Particle Detector Development and Performance · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena
