ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
In an earlier paper, a new class of thin-shell cavities were proposed to evade the steep frequency scaling of conventional axion haloscopes. In this follow-up work, we see that a generalized conic geometry enables robust frequency-tuning for these large-volume cm-wave cavities. The frequency-defining dimension of a conic shell-cavity changes symmetrically and uniformly during tuning, maintaining a high axion coupling efficiency (the form factor) to an external solenoid field. It is further shown that such tunable geometry is not restricted to circular cones. A general prescription for arbitrary volume-filling conic shell-cavities is developed and direct solutions are obtained for the created numerical models. The largest of the realized designs is a meandering brain cavity that is tunable over a frequency range of 20%. The scan rate of this cavity is three orders of magnitude larger than that of a scaled cylindrical cavity used in the current generation experiments. The prospects for such a large improvement in the scan rate should motivate R & D efforts in fabrication and other implementation techniques. If these engineering challenges can be met, cavity-based axion haloscopes can stay competitive at frequencies higher than a few GHz. We propose an experimental configuration at 20 GHz (~ 80 $mu$eV) using an array of brain cavities and compare it with other proposals for similar frequencies.
The scan rate of an axion haloscope is proportional to the square of the cavity volume. In this paper, a new class of thin-shell cavities are proposed to search for axionic dark matter. These cavities feature active volume much larger (>20X) than tha
Gadolinium-loading of large water Cherenkov detectors is a prime method for the detection of the Diffuse Supernova Neutrino Background (DSNB). While the enhanced neutron tagging capability greatly reduces single-event backgrounds, correlated events m
The realization and characterization of a high quality factor resonator composed of two hollow-dielectric cylinders with its pseudo-TM$_{030}$ mode resonating at 10.9 GHz frequency is discussed. The quality factor was measured at the temperatures 300
Searches for dark matter axion involve the use of microwave resonant cavities operating in a strong magnetic field. Detector sensitivity is directly related to the cavity quality factor, which is limited, however, by the presence of the external magn
A variety of detectors has been proposed for dark matter direct detection, but most of them -- by the fact -- are still at R&D stage. In many cases, it is claimed that the lack of an adequate detectors radio-purity might be compensated through heavy