4.8 Article

Search for magnetic monopoles produced via the Schwinger mechanism

Journal

NATURE
Volume 602, Issue 7895, Pages 63-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-04298-1

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Swiss NSF [PP00P2 150583]
  2. UK Science and Technology Facilities Council [ST/L000326/1, ST/L00044X/1, ST/N00101X/1, ST/P000258/1, ST/P000762/1, ST/T000732/1, ST/T000759/1, ST/T000791/1]
  3. Generalitat Valenciana [PROMETEO-II/2017/033, PROMETEO/2019/087]
  4. MCIU/AEI/FEDER, UE [FPA2016-77177-C2-1-P, FPA2017-85985-P, FPA2017-84543-P, PGC2018-094856-B-I00]
  5. Physics Department of King's College London
  6. NSERC
  7. V-P Research of the University of Alberta (UofA)
  8. UofA
  9. UEFISCDI (Romania)
  10. INFN (Italy)
  11. Estonian Research Council [MOBTT5]
  12. Research Funds of the University of Helsinki
  13. NSF [2011214]
  14. Institute for Particle Physics Phenomenology Associateship
  15. Division Of Physics
  16. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien [2011214] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  17. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF) [PP00P2_150583] Funding Source: Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)
  18. STFC [ST/T000732/1, ST/T000759/1, ST/N00101X/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Magnetic monopoles, hypothetical fundamental particles, are searched for via the Schwinger mechanism in lead-lead heavy ion collisions. The MoEDAL experiment used trapping detectors and SQUID magnetometers to exclude the existence of magnetic monopoles with specific masses and charges.
Electrically charged particles can be created by the decay of strong enough electric fields, a phenomenon known as the Schwinger mechanism(1). By electromagnetic duality, a sufficiently strong magnetic field would similarly produce magnetic monopoles, if they exist(2). Magnetic monopoles are hypothetical fundamental particles that are predicted by several theories beyond the standard model(3-7) but have never been experimentally detected. Searching for the existence of magnetic monopoles via the Schwinger mechanism has not yet been attempted, but it is advantageous, owing to the possibility of calculating its rate through semi-classical techniques without perturbation theory, as well as that the production of the magnetic monopoles should be enhanced by their finite size(8,9) and strong coupling to photons(2,10). Here we present a search for magnetic monopole production by the Schwinger mechanism in Pb-Pb heavy ion collisions at the Large Hadron Collider, producing the strongest known magnetic fields in the current Universe(11). It was conducted by the MoEDAL experiment, whose trapping detectors were exposed to 0.235 per nanobarn, or approximately 1.8 x 10(9), of Pb-Pb collisions with 5.02-teraelectronvolt center-of-mass energy per collision in November 2018. A superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID) magnetometer scanned the trapping detectors of MoEDAL for the presence of magnetic charge, which would induce a persistent current in the SQUID. Magnetic monopoles with integer Dirac charges of 1, 2 and 3 and masses up to 75 gigaelectronvolts per speed of light squared were excluded by the analysis at the 95% confidence level. This provides a lower mass limit for finite-size magnetic monopoles from a collider search and greatly extends previous mass bounds.

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