Mineral Detection of Neutrinos and Dark Matter. A Whitepaper
Sebastian Baum, Patrick Stengel, Natsue Abe, Javier F. Acevedo,, Gabriela R. Araujo, Yoshihiro Asahara, Frank Avignone, Levente Balogh, Laura, Baudis, Yilda Boukhtouchen, Joseph Bramante, Pieter Alexander Breur, Lorenzo, Caccianiga, Francesco Capozzi, Juan I. Collar, Reza Ebadi

TL;DR
This whitepaper explores the potential of minerals as natural and laboratory-based detectors for nuclear recoils caused by neutrinos and dark matter, leveraging damage features in crystals over various timescales.
Contribution
It introduces a novel interdisciplinary approach combining geoscience, material science, and physics to develop mineral-based detectors for neutrinos and dark matter.
Findings
Minerals can record damage from nuclear recoils over millions to billions of years.
Laboratory techniques are being developed to read damage features at nanometer scales.
Minerals could enable new methods for detecting astrophysical neutrinos and dark matter.
Abstract
Minerals are solid state nuclear track detectors - nuclear recoils in a mineral leave latent damage to the crystal structure. Depending on the mineral and its temperature, the damage features are retained in the material from minutes (in low-melting point materials such as salts at a few hundred degrees C) to timescales much larger than the 4.5 Gyr-age of the Solar System (in refractory materials at room temperature). The damage features from the MeV fission fragments left by spontaneous fission of U and other heavy unstable isotopes have long been used for fission track dating of geological samples. Laboratory studies have demonstrated the readout of defects caused by nuclear recoils with energies as small as keV. This whitepaper discusses a wide range of possible applications of minerals as detectors for keV nuclear recoils: Using natural…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsParticle Detector Development and Performance · Nuclear Physics and Applications · Dark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena
