Séminaire: (Dark Matter experiment) A Walk on the Dark Side
par
DrBiagio ROSSI(Princeton University)
→
Europe/Paris
Amphi Recherche (Dept.Phys.)
Amphi Recherche
Dept.Phys.
Description
There is a wide range of astronomical evidence that the visible stars
and gas in all galaxies, including our own, are immersed in a much
larger cloud of non-luminous matter, typically an order of magnitude
greater in total mass. The existence of this "dark matter" is
consistent with evidence from large-scale galaxy surveys and microwave
background measurements, indicating that the majority of matter in the
universe is non-baryonic. The nature of this non-baryonic component is
still totally unknown, and the resolution of the "dark matter puzzle"
is of fundamental importance to cosmology, astrophysics, and elementary
particle physics.
Three major lines of research are directing their efforts at
detection of dark matter: the accelerator-based program at the LHC,
indirect searches with satellite-born detectors and direct searches with
detectors operated in deep underground laboratories. The time is ripe
for a discovery, and the new generation of direct searches promises to
probe the most interesting region of parameters for the dark matter
candidates.
I will review and describe the DarkSide depleted argon
detector at LNGS.