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Mineral Detection of Neutrinos and Dark Matter 2024. Proceedings

Authors :
Baum, Sebastian
Huber, Patrick
Stengel, Patrick
Abe, Natsue
Ang, Daniel G.
Apollonio, Lorenzo
Araujo, Gabriela R.
Balogh, Levente
Boukhtouchen, Pranshu Bhaumik Yilda
Bramante, Joseph
Caccianiga, Lorenzo
Calabrese-Day, Andrew
Chang, Qing
Collar, Juan I.
Ebadi, Reza
Elykov, Alexey
Freese, Katherine
Fung, Audrey
Galelli, Claudio
Gleason, Arianna E.
Perez, Mariano Guerrero
Hakenmüller, Janina
Hanyu, Takeshi
Hasebe, Noriko
Hirose, Shigenobu
Horiuchi, Shunsaku
Hoshino, Yasushi
Ido, Yuki
Ivanov, Vsevolod
Kamiyama, Takashi
Kato, Takenori
Kawamura, Yoji
Kelso, Chris
Khodaparast, Giti A.
LaVoie-Ingram, Emilie M.
Leybourne, Matthew
Liu, Xingxin
Lucas, Thalles
Mariani, Brenden A. Magill Federico M.
Mkhonto, Sharlotte
Mumm, Hans Pieter
Murase, Kohta
Naka, Tatsuhiro
Oguni, Kenji
Ream, Kathryn
Scholberg, Kate
Shen, Maximilian
Spitz, Joshua
Suzuki, Katsuhiko
Takla, Alexander
Tang, Jiashen
Tapia-Arellano, Natalia
Vermeesch, Pieter
Vincent, Aaron C.
Vladimirov, Nikita
Walsworth, Ronald
Waters, David
Wurtz, Greg
Yamasaki, Seiko
Zhang, Xianyi
Publication Year :
2024

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 recording nuclear recoil events on laboratory timescales using natural or artificial minerals. Contributions to this proceedings discuss the vast physics potential, the progress in experimental studies, and the numerous challenges lying ahead on the path towards mineral detection. These include a better understanding of the formation and annealing of recoil defects in crystals; identifying the best classes of minerals and, for paleo-detectors, understanding their geology; modeling and control of the relevant backgrounds; developing, combining, and scaling up imaging and data analysis techniques; and many others. During the last years, MDvDM has grown rapidly and gained attention. Small-scale experimental efforts focused on establishing various microscopic readout techniques are underway at institutions in North America, Europe and Asia. We are looking ahead to an exciting future full of challenges to overcome, surprises to be encountered, and discoveries lying ahead of us.<br />Comment: Summary and proceedings of the MDvDM'24 conference, Jan 8-11 2024

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2405.01626
Document Type :
Working Paper