News and Events
Team of Scientists Goes Deep, Armed with World's Best Detectors of Dark Matter
March 14th, 2008
(Published by Stanford University)
A half-mile down in an old iron ore mine in Minnesota, incredibly
sensitive detectors have been waiting for a particle of dark matter, an
invisible substance that may form the skeleton of galaxies, to make
itself known.
A consortium of research scientists, including Kavli Institute for
Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology (KIPAC) physicist Blas Cabrera,
anticipated the detection of a predicted-but-undiscovered dark particle
known as a weakly interacting massive particle, or WIMP. The hope was
that several WIMPs would travel through space and a half-mile of Earth
to plunk themselves into the nuclei of germanium atoms in the
detectors, each collision creating a vibration and a tiny puff of heat
that would signal the WIMP's existence.
WIMPs are leading candidates for dark matter, the unseen stuff that
accounts for 85 percent of the entire mass of the universe. Billions of
WIMPs may be passing unnoticed through the bodies of humans every
second.
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| The CDMS II detectors (hexagons) are stacked in an icebox with six insulating layers to keep the instruments cold. Wires carry measurements from the detectors to computers outside. |
The Cryogenic Dark Matter Search was somewhat like waiting for a phone
call from the early moments of the universe, when dark matter was
formed. But in this case, the phone never rang. The detectors in the
clean room at the bottom of the mine, cooled within a whisper of
absolute zero, recorded no WIMPS. Scientists call that a "null result,"
but it is still valuable, Cabrera said.
By building the world's most sensitive and accurate WIMP detectors—a
feat comparable to building the best telescope to search the skies—the
researchers can now relay the word to other scientists that detectors
must be built bigger if they are to have a fighting chance of finding
the elusive WIMP.
So the Cryogenic Dark Matter Search, which started out in an
underground tunnel at Stanford before moving to the Soudan mine in
Minnesota, will next move to a deeper site at Snolab in Canada. The
detectors will grow from 3.7 kilos of germanium to 25 kilos.
With a larger detector, as with a wider telescope, "You will be able to
see things you've never been able to see before," Cabrera said.
Institutions participating in the Cryogenic Dark Matter Search, in
addition to Stanford, are Case Western Reserve University, Fermi
National Accelerator Laboratory, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, National Institute of Standards
and Technology, Princeton University, Queens University, Santa Clara
University, Syracuse University, University of California-Berkeley,
UC-Santa Barbara, University of Colorado at Denver, University of
Florida and University of Minnesota.
Press release may be found here.