Shedding light on dark matter with gravitational waves: searches in the first part of the fourth observing run of LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA

Not scheduled
20m

Speaker

迈 乔 (中国科学院大学 国际理论物理中心(亚太地区))

Description

Abstract:
Dark matter could compose ~80% of all matter in the universe, and yet it is completely invisible to us. Despite decades of experiments designed to detect dark matter, and numerous models for potential dark matter particles, no concrete evidence has been put forward to support the existence of beyond standard-model physics. Because of this, it is worth asking whether approaching the detection of dark matter from a different point of view, that is, via gravitational-wave interferometers, could provide some insight into explaining the origin of dark matter. In this talk, I will discuss searches for ultralight particle dark matters. While not designed to search for dark matter, gravitational-wave detectors can robustly probe a variety of dark-matter models simultaneously, without affecting their sensitivity to canonical gravitational-wave sources, and put competitive and sometimes even stronger constraints than those from other experiments designed to search for dark matter.

Primary author

迈 乔 (中国科学院大学 国际理论物理中心(亚太地区))

Co-authors

Dr Andrew L. Miller (Utrecht University) Huaike Guo (University of Chinese Academy of Sciences)

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