Published April 20, 2020 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Electron ionization via dark matter-electron scattering and the Migdal effect

  • 1. University of Chicago
  • 2. Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory

Description

There are currently several existing and proposed experiments designed to probe sub-GeV dark matter (DM) using electron ionization in various materials. The projected signal rates for these experiments assume that this ionization yield arises only from DM scattering directly off electron targets, ignoring secondary ionization contributions from DM scattering off nuclear targets. We investigate the validity of this assumption and show that if sub-GeV DM couples with comparable strength to both protons and electrons, as would be the case for a dark photon mediator, the ionization signal from atomic scattering via the Migdal effect scales with the atomic number $Z$ and 3-momentum transfer $q$ as $Z^2q^2$. The result is that the Migdal effect is always subdominant to electron scattering when the mediator is light, but that Migdal-induced ionization can dominate over electron scattering for heavy mediators and DM masses in the hundreds of MeV range. We put these two ionization processes on identical theoretical footing, address some theoretical uncertainties in the choice of atomic wave functions used to compute rates, and discuss the implications for DM scenarios where the Migdal process dominates, including for XENON10, XENON100, and the recent XENON1T results on light DM scattering.

Files

PhysRevD.101.076014.pdf

Files (649.2 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:5d143042387f33a6aa8c0cc354f9d35d
649.2 kB Preview Download

Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1103/PhysRevD.101.076014
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:12183

Funding

U.S. Department of Energy
DE-AC02-07CH11359
University of Chicago
Munich Institute for Astro
National Science Foundation
1806974
Kavli Foundation
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Physical Sciences Division
Department(s)
Enrico Fermi Institute
Center(s) or Institute(s)
Kavli Institute for Cosmological Physics