2018 Bell Lecture
The XENON project: at the forefront of Dark Matter Direct
Detection
Department of Physics Columbia University
What is the Dark Matter which makes 85% of the matter in the Universe? We have
been asking this question for many decades and used a variety of experimental
approaches to address it, with detectors on Earth and in space. Yet, the nature
of Dark Matter remains a mystery. An answer to this fundamental question will
likely come from ongoing and future searches with accelerators, indirect
and direct detection. Detection of a Dark Matter signal in an ultra-low
background terrestrial detector will provide the most direct evidence of
its existence and will represent a ground-breaking discovery in physics and
cosmology. Among the variety of detectors used to search for dark matter in
underground laboratories, liquid xenon time projection chambers (LXeTPCs) have
shown the best sensitivity, thanks to a combination of very large target
mass, ultra-low background and excellent signal-to-noise discrimination.
I will discuss recent results from the leading experiment based on the first
ton-scale liquid LXeTPC, XENON1T, and the status of its upgrade to a larger
detector, XENONnT.
Friday, February 15th 2019, 15:30
Ernest Rutherford Physics Building, Keys Auditorium (room 112)
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