Mineral Detection of Neutrinos and Dark Matter 2024. Proceedings
Sebastian Baum, Patrick Huber, Patrick Stengel, Natsue Abe, Daniel G., Ang, Lorenzo Apollonio, Gabriela R. Araujo, Levente Balogh, Pranshu Bhaumik, Yilda Boukhtouchen, Joseph Bramante, Lorenzo Caccianiga, Andrew, Calabrese-Day, Qing Chang, Juan I. Collar, Reza Ebadi

TL;DR
The paper summarizes the recent developments, challenges, and future prospects of mineral detection techniques for neutrinos and dark matter, highlighting experimental progress and the field's rapid growth.
Contribution
It provides an overview of the emerging mineral detection field, including experimental advances, challenges, and potential applications for neutrino and dark matter detection.
Findings
Growing experimental efforts worldwide in mineral detection techniques
Identification of key challenges like defect understanding and background modeling
Potential for long-term astrophysical and nuclear applications
Abstract
The second "Mineral Detection of Neutrinos and Dark Matter" (MDvDM'24) meeting was held January 8-11, 2024 in Arlington, VA, USA, hosted by Virginia Tech's Center for Neutrino Physics. This document collects contributions from this workshop, providing an overview of activities in the field. MDvDM'24 was the second topical workshop dedicated to the emerging field of mineral detection of neutrinos and dark matter, following a meeting hosted by IFPU in Trieste, Italy in October 2022. Mineral detectors have been proposed for a wide variety of applications, including searching for dark matter, measuring various fluxes of astrophysical neutrinos over gigayear timescales, monitoring nuclear reactors, and nuclear disarmament protocols; both as paleo-detectors using natural minerals that could have recorded the traces of nuclear recoils for timescales as long as a billion years and as detectors…
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