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Prospects for detection of target-dependent annual modulation in direct dark matter searches

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Published 3 February 2016 , , Citation Eugenio Del Nobile et al JCAP02(2016)009 DOI 10.1088/1475-7516/2016/02/009

1475-7516/2016/02/009

Abstract

Earth's rotation about the Sun produces an annual modulation in the expected scattering rate at direct dark matter detection experiments. The annual modulation as a function of the recoil energy ER imparted by the dark matter particle to a target nucleus is expected to vary depending on the detector material. However, for most interactions a change of variables from ER to vmin, the minimum speed a dark matter particle must have to impart a fixed ER to a target nucleus, produces an annual modulation independent of the target element. We recently showed that if the dark matter-nucleus cross section contains a non-factorizable target and dark matter velocity dependence, the annual modulation as a function of vmin can be target dependent. Here we examine more extensively the necessary conditions for target-dependent modulation, its observability in present-day experiments, and the extent to which putative signals could identify a dark matter-nucleus differential cross section with a non-factorizable dependence on the dark matter velocity.

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10.1088/1475-7516/2016/02/009