Physicists revive 1773 experiment to hunt dark matter

Researchers propose updating a 1773 experiment by Henry Cavendish to detect millicharged particles, a potential dark matter candidate. The design uses nested metal shells and could be 10,000 times more sensitive than past methods. The setup promises to be cheaper and faster than particle accelerators.

In 1773, British scientist Henry Cavendish conducted an experiment with two nested metal shells to study electromagnetism by measuring electric potential differences. Now, Peter Graham at Stanford University and colleagues suggest adapting this setup to search for millicharged particles (mCPs), exotic particles with tiny charges that could form dark matter, which outweighs ordinary matter in the universe but remains unidentified. The team plans to apply voltage to the outer shell and measure voltage differences with the inner one, detecting any mCPs present due to their charge. An accumulator device would draw charged particles from the room into the apparatus, as explained by team member Harikrishnan Ramani at the University of Delaware. The experiment's cost is estimated under a million dollars, far less than running a particle accelerator for a year. Calculations indicate it could surpass the sensitivity of upcoming accelerators. Kevin Kelly at Texas A&M University called the sensitivity estimates conservative, potentially 100 to 10,000 times better, enabling detection of even tinier charges. Christopher Hill at Ohio State University praised the approach, noting it could be built much faster than accelerators and lead to a major discovery about the universe's composition. He is considering a similar setup with his team. The researchers are refining details and seeking funding. Ramani said success could come in two or three years, allowing mCPs to be extracted and studied afterward.

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Undergraduate students at the University of Hamburg have constructed a simple cavity detector to search for axions, hypothetical particles that may constitute dark matter. Despite limited resources, their experiment set new limits on axion properties, as detailed in a recent study. The project demonstrates that small-scale efforts can contribute to major physics challenges.

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Physicists at the University of Massachusetts Amherst propose that a record-breaking neutrino detected in 2023 originated from the explosion of a primordial black hole carrying a 'dark charge.' The particle's energy, 100,000 times greater than that produced by the Large Hadron Collider, puzzled scientists since only the KM3NeT experiment recorded it. Their model, published in Physical Review Letters, could also hint at the nature of dark matter.

CERN researchers are set to transport around 100 antiprotons by truck around the campus near Geneva, Switzerland, on Tuesday. This marks the first demonstration of a planned antimatter delivery service to labs across Europe. The experiment, known as STEP, aims to enable precision measurements away from the noisy antimatter factory.

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Researchers at Nanjing University have identified a new quantum state of matter in a thin carbon material that electrons neither fully two-dimensional nor three-dimensional. The discovery, termed the transdimensional anomalous Hall effect, emerged unexpectedly during experiments in magnetic fields. Lei Wang and his team confirmed the phenomenon after a year of analysis.

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