Search for ultralight dark matter with a frequency adjustable
diamagnetic levitated sensor
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2307.15758v2
- Date: Wed, 2 Aug 2023 09:06:03 GMT
- Title: Search for ultralight dark matter with a frequency adjustable
diamagnetic levitated sensor
- Authors: Rui Li, Shaochun Lin, Liang Zhang, Changkui Duan, Pu Huang and
Jiangfeng Du
- Abstract summary: bosonic ultralight (sub meV) dark matter is well motivated because it could couple to the Standard Model (SM) and induce new forces.
Previous MICROSCOPE and Eot Wash torsion experiments have achieved high accuracy in the sub-1 Hz region.
- Score: 11.996998827367511
- License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
- Abstract: Among several dark matter candidates, bosonic ultralight (sub meV) dark
matter is well motivated because it could couple to the Standard Model (SM) and
induce new forces. Previous MICROSCOPE and Eot Wash torsion experiments have
achieved high accuracy in the sub-1 Hz region, but at higher frequencies there
is still a lack of relevant experimental research. We propose an experimental
scheme based on the diamagnetic levitated micromechanical oscillator, one of
the most sensitive sensors for acceleration sensitivity below the kilohertz
scale. In order to improve the measurement range, we used the sensor whose
resonance frequency could be adjusted from 0.1Hz to 100Hz. The limits of the
coupling constant are improved by more than 10 times compared to previous
reports, and it may be possible to achieve higher accuracy by using the array
of sensors in the future.
Related papers
- Constraining Ultralight Dark Matter through an Accelerated Resonant Search [14.200713169114342]
We investigate the nucleon couplings of ultralight axion dark matter using a magnetometer operating in a nuclear magnetic resonance mode.
We achieve an ultrahigh sensitivity of 0.73 fT/Hz$1/2$ at around 5 Hz, corresponding to energy resolution of approximately 1.5$times 10-23,rmeV/Hz1/2$.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-09-28T17:03:26Z) - Diamond quantum magnetometer with dc sensitivity of < 10 pT Hz$^{-1/2}$
toward measurement of biomagnetic field [0.0]
We present a sensitive diamond quantum sensor with a magnetic field sensitivity of $9.4 pm 0.1mathrmpT/sqrtHz$ in a near-dc frequency range of 5 to 100Hz.
This sensor is based on the continuous-wave optically detected magnetic resonance of an ensemble of nitrogen-vacancy centers along the [111] direction in a diamond (111) single crystal.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-09-08T03:12:32Z) - Ferrimagnetic Oscillator Magnetometer [0.0]
The device exhibits a fixed, calibration-free response governed by the electronmagnetic gyro ratio.
The device achieves a minimum sensitivity of 100 fT/$sqrttextHz$ to AC magnetic fields of unknown phase.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-05-31T15:21:57Z) - DC Quantum Magnetometry Below the Ramsey Limit [68.8204255655161]
We demonstrate quantum sensing of dc magnetic fields that exceeds the sensitivity of conventional $Tast$-limited dc magnetometry by more than an order of magnitude.
We used nitrogen-vacancy centers in a diamond rotating at periods comparable to the spin coherence time, and characterize the dependence of magnetic sensitivity on measurement time and rotation speed.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-03-27T07:32:53Z) - High-Field Magnetometry with Hyperpolarized Nuclear Spins [0.0]
We propose and demonstrate a high-field spin magnetometer constructed from an ensemble of hyperpolarized $13C$ nuclear spins in diamond.
For quantum sensing at 7T and a single crystal sample, we demonstrate spectral resolution better than 100 mHz.
This work points to interesting opportunities for microscale NMR chemical sensors constructed from hyperpolarized nanodiamonds.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-12-22T01:33:07Z) - Investigation and comparison of measurement schemes in the low frequency
biosensing regime using solid-state defect centers [58.720142291102135]
Solid state defects in diamond make promising quantum sensors with high sensitivity andtemporal resolution.
Inhomogeneous broadening and drive amplitude variations have differing impacts on the sensitivity depending on the sensing scheme used.
We numerically investigate and compare the predicted sensitivity of schemes based on continuous-wave (CW) optically detected magnetic resonance (ODMR) spectroscopy, pi-pulse ODMR and Ramsey interferometry.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-09-27T13:05:23Z) - An integrated magnetometry platform with stackable waveguide-assisted
detection channels for sensing arrays [45.82374977939355]
We present a novel architecture which allows us to create NV$-$-centers a few nanometers below the diamond surface.
We experimentally verify the coupling efficiency, showcase the detection of magnetic resonance signals through the waveguides and perform first proof-of-principle experiments in magnetic field and temperature sensing.
In the future, our approach will enable the development of two-dimensional sensing arrays facilitating spatially and temporally correlated magnetometry.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-12-04T12:59:29Z) - Searching for new physics with a levitated-sensor-based
gravitational-wave detector [0.12314765641075436]
The Levitated Sensor Detector (LSD) is a compact resonant gravitational-wave detector based on optically trapped particles.
The LSD sensitivity has more favorable frequency scaling at high frequencies compared to laser interferometer detectors such as LIGO.
Over an order of magnitude of unexplored frequency space for GWs above 10 kHz is accessible with an instrument 10 to 100 meters in size.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-10-25T16:33:12Z) - High-Frequency Gravitational-Wave Detection Using a Chiral Resonant
Mechanical Element and a Short Unstable Optical Cavity [59.66860395002946]
We suggest the measurement of the twist of a chiral mechanical element induced by a gravitational wave.
The induced twist rotates a flat optical mirror on top of this chiral element, leading to the deflection of an incident laser beam.
We estimate a gravitational wave strain sensitivity between 10-21/sqrtHz and 10-23/sqrtHz at around 10 kHz frequency.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-07-15T20:09:43Z) - Optomechanical lasers for inertial sensing [55.41644538483948]
We have developed an inertially sensitive optomechanical laser by combining a Vertical-External-Cavity Surface-Emitting Laser with a monolithic fused silica resonator.
By placing the external cavity mirror of the VECSEL onto the optomechanical resonator test mass, we create a sensor where external accelerations are directly transcribed onto the lasing frequency.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-05-19T03:18:40Z) - Force and acceleration sensing with optically levitated nanogram masses
at microkelvin temperatures [57.72546394254112]
This paper demonstrates cooling of the center-of-mass motion of 10 $mu$m-diameter optically levitated silica spheres to an effective temperature of $50pm22 mu$K.
It is shown that under these conditions the spheres remain stably trapped at pressures of $sim 10-7$ mbar with no active cooling for periods longer than a day.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-01-29T16:20:35Z)
This list is automatically generated from the titles and abstracts of the papers in this site.
This site does not guarantee the quality of this site (including all information) and is not responsible for any consequences.