Back to Search Start Over

A Search for Charged Excitation of Dark Matter with the KamLAND-Zen Detector

Authors :
Abe, S.
Asami, S.
Gando, A.
Gando, Y.
Gima, T.
Goto, A.
Hachiya, T.
Hata, K.
Hayashida, S.
Hosokawa, K.
Ichimura, K.
Ieki, S.
Ikeda, H.
Inoue, K.
Ishidoshiro, K.
Kamei, Y.
Kawada, N.
Kinoshita, T.
Koga, M.
Maemura, N.
Mitsui, T.
Miyake, H.
Nakamura, K.
Nakamura, R.
Ono, A.
Ota, N.
Otsuka, S.
Ozaki, H.
Sakai, T.
Sambonsugi, H.
Shimizu, I.
Shirahata, Y.
Shirai, J.
Shiraishi, K.
Suzuki, A.
Suzuki, Y.
Takeuchi, A.
Tamae, K.
Ueshima, K.
Wada, Y.
Watanabe, H.
Yoshida, Y.
Obara, S.
Chernyak, D.
Kozlov, A.
Yoshida, S.
Umehara, S.
Takemoto, Y.
Fushimi, K.
Hirata, S.
Ichikawa, A.
Nakamura, K. Z.
Yoshida, M.
Berger, B. E.
Fujikawa, B. K.
Grant, C.
Li, A.
Learned, J. G.
Maricic, J.
Axani, S.
Winslow, L. A.
Fu, Z.
Efremenko, Y.
Karwowski, H. J.
Markoff, D. M.
Tornow, W.
ODonnell, T.
DellOro, S.
Detwiler, J. A.
Enomoto, S.
Decowski, M. P.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

There are many theories where a dark matter particle is part of a multiplet with an electrically charged state. If WIMP dark matter ($\chi^{0}$) is accompanied by a charged excited state ($\chi^{-}$) separated by a small mass difference, it can form a stable bound state with a nucleus. In supersymmetric models, the $\chi^{0}$ and the $\chi^{-}$ could be the neutralino and a charged slepton, such as the neutralino-stau degenerate model. The formation binding process is expected to result in an energy deposition of {\it O}(1--10 MeV), making it suitable for detection in large liquid scintillator detectors. We describe new constraints on the bound state formation with a xenon nucleus using the KamLAND-Zen 400 Phase-II dataset. In order to enlarge the searchable parameter space, all xenon isotopes in the detector were used. For a benchmark parameter set of $m_{\chi^{0}} = 100$ GeV and $\Delta m = 10$ MeV, this study sets the most stringent upper limits on the recombination cross section $\langle\sigma v\rangle$ and the decay-width of $\chi^{-}$ of $2.0 \times 10^{-31}$ ${\rm cm^3/s}$ and $1.1 \times 10^{-18}$ GeV, respectively (90\% confidence level).

Subjects

Subjects :
High Energy Physics - Experiment

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2101.06049
Document Type :
Working Paper