4.7 Article

Metastable nuclear isomers as dark matter accelerators

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW D
Volume 101, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevD.101.055001

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. Government of Canada through Industry Canada
  2. Province of Ontario through the Ministry of Economic Development and Innovation
  3. NSF [PHY-1638509, PHY-1607611]
  4. Simons Foundation [378243]
  5. Heising-Simons Foundation [2015-038, 2018-0765]
  6. DOE [DE-AC0205CH11231]
  7. Munich Institute for Astro-and Particle Physics (MIAPP) of the DFG cluster of excellence Origin and Structure of the Universe

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Inelastic dark matter and strongly interacting dark matter are poorly constrained by direct detection experiments since they both require the scattering event to deliver energy from the nucleus into the dark matter in order to have observable effects. We propose to test these scenarios by searching for the collisional deexcitation of metastable nuclear isomers by the dark matter particles. The longevity of these isomers is related to a strong suppression of gamma- and beta-transitions, typically inhibited by a large difference in the angular momentum for the nuclear transition. The collisional deexcitation by dark matter is possible since heavy dark matter particles can have a momentum exchange with the nucleus comparable to the inverse nuclear size, hence lifting tremendous angular momentum suppression of the nuclear transition. This deexcitation can be observed either by searching for the direct effects of the decaying isomer, or through the rescattering or decay of excited dark matter states in a nearby conventional dark matter detector setup. Existing nuclear isomer sources such as naturally occurring Ta-180m, Ba-137m produced in decaying Cesium in nuclear waste, Lu-177m from medical waste, and Hf-178m from the Department of Energy storage can be combined with current dark matter detector technology to search for this class of dark matter.

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