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The nature of dark matter remains one of the preeminent mysteries
in physics and cosmology. It appears to require the existence of
new particles whose interactions to ordinary matter are
extraordinarily feeble. One well-motivated candidate is the axion,
an extraordinarily light neutral particle that may possibly be
detected by looking for their conversion to detectable microwaves
in the presence of a strong magnetic field. This has led to a
number of experimental searches that are beginning to probe
plausible axion model space and may discover the axion in the near
future. These proceedings discuss the challenges of designing and
operating tunable resonant cavities and detectors at ultralow
temperatures. The topics discussed here have potential application
far beyond the field of dark matter detection and may be applied to
resonant cavities for accelerators as well as designing
superconducting detectors for quantum information and computing
applications. This work is intended for graduate students and
researchers interested in learning the unique requirements for
designing and operating microwave cavities and detectors for direct
axion searches and to introduce several proposed experimental
concepts that are still in the prototype stage.
A host of astrophysical measurements suggest that most of the
matter in the Universe is an invisible, nonluminous substance that
physicists call "dark matter." Understanding the nature of dark
matter is one of the greatest challenges of modern physics and is
of paramount importance to our theories of cosmology and particle
physics. This text explores one of the leading hypotheses to
explain dark matter: that it consists of ultralight bosons forming
an oscillating field that feebly interacts with light and matter.
Many new experiments have emerged over the last decade to test this
hypothesis, involving state-of-the-art microwave cavities,
precision nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) measurements, dark
matter "radios," and synchronized global networks of atomic clocks,
magnetometers, and interferometers. The editors have gathered
leading experts from around the world to present the theories
motivating these searches, evidence about dark matter from
astrophysics, and the diverse experimental techniques employed in
searches for ultralight bosonic dark matter. The text provides a
comprehensive and accessible introduction to this blossoming field
of research for advanced undergraduates, beginning graduate
students, or anyone new to the field, with tutorials and solved
problems in every chapter. The multifaceted nature of the research
- combining ideas and methods from atomic, molecular, and optical
physics, nuclear physics, condensed matter physics, electrical
engineering, particle physics, astrophysics, and cosmology - makes
this introductory approach attractive for beginning researchers as
well as members of the broader scientific community. This is an
open access book.
A host of astrophysical measurements suggest that most of the
matter in the Universe is an invisible, nonluminous substance that
physicists call "dark matter." Understanding the nature of dark
matter is one of the greatest challenges of modern physics and is
of paramount importance to our theories of cosmology and particle
physics. This text explores one of the leading hypotheses to
explain dark matter: that it consists of ultralight bosons forming
an oscillating field that feebly interacts with light and matter.
Many new experiments have emerged over the last decade to test this
hypothesis, involving state-of-the-art microwave cavities,
precision nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) measurements, dark
matter "radios," and synchronized global networks of atomic clocks,
magnetometers, and interferometers. The editors have gathered
leading experts from around the world to present the theories
motivating these searches, evidence about dark matter from
astrophysics, and the diverse experimental techniques employed in
searches for ultralight bosonic dark matter. The text provides a
comprehensive and accessible introduction to this blossoming field
of research for advanced undergraduates, beginning graduate
students, or anyone new to the field, with tutorials and solved
problems in every chapter. The multifaceted nature of the research
- combining ideas and methods from atomic, molecular, and optical
physics, nuclear physics, condensed matter physics, electrical
engineering, particle physics, astrophysics, and cosmology - makes
this introductory approach attractive for beginning researchers as
well as members of the broader scientific community. This is an
open access book.
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