Probing Dark Matter with SuperCDMS in the Era of eV Sensitivity

Date

Thursday February 20, 2020
10:30 am - 11:30 am

Location

Stirling A
Event Category

Ziqing Hong
Northwestern University

Abstract

Dark matter is a hypothetical form of matter that, if it exists, may account for more than a quarter of the energy density of our universe. Despite the variety of astrophysical evidence pointing to its existence, the direct interaction of dark matter in a terrestrial detector is yet to be observed. The Super Cryogenic Dark Matter Search (SuperCDMS) experiment tries to observe a dark matter signal in silicon and germanium detectors operated around 50 miliKelvin. In this talk, I will discuss the status of the next generation SuperCDMS experiment, the recent results with an eV-resolution gram-scale prototype detector, and the future plan with this technology.

 

Upcoming Events

Diving into the unknown: rare event searches with argon detectors

Nov

28

Thursday

Event Default Image
2:30 pm - 3:30 pm
STI AUD

Diving into the unknown: rare event searches with argon detectors

Departmental - Diving into the unknown: rare event searches with argon detectors

Variational Monte Carlo with Large Patched Transformers

Nov

29

Friday

Event Default Image
1:30 pm - 2:30 pm
STI A

Variational Monte Carlo with Large Patched Transformers

Departmental -Variational Monte Carlo with Large Patched Transformers