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1.
Phys Rev Lett ; 105(5): 051801, 2010 Jul 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20867906

ABSTRACT

Scalar fields with a "chameleon" property, in which the effective particle mass is a function of its local environment, are common to many theories beyond the standard model and could be responsible for dark energy. If these fields couple weakly to the photon, they could be detectable through the afterglow effect of photon-chameleon-photon transitions. The ADMX experiment was used in the first chameleon search with a microwave cavity to set a new limit on scalar chameleon-photon coupling ßγ excluding values between 2×10(9) and 5×10(14) for effective chameleon masses between 1.9510 and 1.9525 µeV.

2.
Phys Rev Lett ; 104(4): 041301, 2010 Jan 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20366699

ABSTRACT

Axions in the microeV mass range are a plausible cold dark-matter candidate and may be detected by their conversion into microwave photons in a resonant cavity immersed in a static magnetic field. We report the first result from such an axion search using a superconducting first-stage amplifier (SQUID) replacing a conventional GaAs field-effect transistor amplifier. This experiment excludes KSVZ dark-matter axions with masses between 3.3 microeV and 3.53 microeV and sets the stage for a definitive axion search utilizing near quantum-limited SQUID amplifiers.

3.
Phys Rev Lett ; 105(17): 171801, 2010 Oct 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21231034

ABSTRACT

Hidden U(1) gauge symmetries are common to many extensions of the standard model proposed to explain dark matter. The hidden gauge vector bosons of such extensions may mix kinetically with standard model photons, providing a means for electromagnetic power to pass through conducting barriers. The axion dark matter experiment detector was used to search for hidden vector bosons originating in an emitter cavity driven with microwave power. We exclude hidden vector bosons with kinetic couplings χ>3.48×10⁻8 for masses less than 3 µeV. This limit represents an improvement of more than 2 orders of magnitude in sensitivity relative to previous cavity experiments.

4.
Phys Rev Lett ; 95(9): 091304, 2005 Aug 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16197206

ABSTRACT

Theoretical arguments predict that the distribution of cold dark matter in spiral galaxies has peaks in velocity space associated with nonthermalized flows of dark matter particles. We searched for the corresponding peaks in the spectrum of microwave photons from axion to photon conversion in a cavity detector for dark matter axions. We found none and place limits on the density of any local flow of axions as a function of the flow velocity dispersion over the axion mass range 1.98 to 2.17 microeV.

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