6533b7d4fe1ef96bd12632de
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Conceptual design of the International Axion Observatory (IAXO)
A. LioliosP. VedrineG. FanourakisDoron CheloucheKlaus Kurt DeschSerkant Ali CetinI. G. IrastorzaKonstantin ZioutasGianpaolo CarosiJavier RedondoI. DratchnevKen'ichi SaikawaIoannis GiomatarisB. GimenoPierre BrunEduardo GuendelmanA. DaelB. DöbrichS. GninenkoE. Ferrer-ribasC. KriegerL. WalckiersJ. RuzJ. A. GarcíaS. MatsukiMilica KrčmarI. ShilonS. RussenschuckKenichi ImaiJ.a. VillarI. OrtegaA. DiagoJ. GalánSergey TroitskyV. N. MuratovaJoerg JaeckelI. SavvidisPh. BraxAmanda WeltmanH. SilvaC. NonesCharles J. HaileyHaley Louise GomezDieter HornsK. Van BibberKrešimir JakovčićS. C. YildizOlivier LimousinJordi IsernFinn Erland ChristensenT. VafeiadisWilliam WesterC. EleftheriadisMichael J. PivovaroffTheodoros GeralisBiljana LakićJulia VogelA. DudarevAndreas RingwaldFritz CaspersA. V. DerbinK. KousourisG. LuzónT. PapaevangelouJ. M. CarmonaJ. KaminskiAnders Clemen JakobsenH. H. J. Ten KateT. DafniA. LindnerM. BetzGeorg G. RaffeltMarin KaruzaS. CaspiMasahiro KawasakiGiovanni CantatoreEric ArmengaudJ. G. GarzaF.j. IguazF. T. AvignoneA. TomásT. SekiguchiM. DavenportPierre SikivieTakashi HiramatsuDieter H. H. HoffmannDiego González-díazYannis K. Semertzidissubject
MICROPICPhysics - Instrumentation and DetectorsPhotonaxionsParameter space7. Clean energyHigh Energy Physics - ExperimentDark Matter detectors (WIMPs axions etc.)High Energy Physics - Experiment (hep-ex)Observatoryetc.)Micropattern gaseous detectors (MSGC GEM THGEM RETHGEM MHSP MICROPIC MICROMEGAS InGrid etc)Detectors and Experimental TechniquesInstrumentationMathematical PhysicsPhysicsGEMsolar [axion]Dark Matter Detectors (Wimps Axions etc.)MicroMegas detectorX-ray detectorsInstrumentation and Detectors (physics.ins-det)Dark Matter detectors (WIMPs axions etc.); Large detector systems for particle and astroparticle physics; Micropattern gaseous detectors (MSGC GEM THGEM RETHGEM MHSP MICROPIC MICROMEGAS InGrid etc); X-ray detectors; Instrumentation; Mathematical PhysicssolarobservatoryMICROMEGASMHSPaxion-like particlesproposed experimentaxions ; dark matter detectors ; x-ray detectors ; Micropattern gaseous detectors ; large detector systems for particle and astroparticle physicsMicromegasX-ray detectorParticle physicsoptics [X-ray]FOS: Physical sciencesSuperconducting magnetMicropattern gaseous detectors (MSGCddc:610Axionactivity reportDark Matter detectors (WIMPssuperconductivity [magnet]etc)HelioscopeLarge detector systems for particle and astroparticle physicssensitivityInGridRETHGEMOrders of magnitude (time)axionLarge detector systems for particle and astroparticle physicTHGEMMicropattern Gaseous Detectors (MSGC Gem THGEM Rethgem MHSP Micropic Micromegas In Grid; etc)description
The International Axion Observatory (IAXO) will be a forth generation axion helioscope. As its primary physics goal, IAXO will look for axions or axion-like particles (ALPs) originating in the Sun via the Primakoff conversion of the solar plasma photons. In terms of signal-to-noise ratio, IAXO will be about 4-5 orders of magnitude more sensitive than CAST, currently the most powerful axion helioscope, reaching sensitivity to axion-photon couplings down to a few $\times 10^{-12}$ GeV$^{-1}$ and thus probing a large fraction of the currently unexplored axion and ALP parameter space. IAXO will also be sensitive to solar axions produced by mechanisms mediated by the axion-electron coupling $g_{ae}$ with sensitivity $-$for the first time$-$ to values of $g_{ae}$ not previously excluded by astrophysics. With several other possible physics cases, IAXO has the potential to serve as a multi-purpose facility for generic axion and ALP research in the next decade. In this paper we present the conceptual design of IAXO, which follows the layout of an enhanced axion helioscope, based on a purpose-built 20m-long 8-coils toroidal superconducting magnet. All the eight 60cm-diameter magnet bores are equipped with focusing x-ray optics, able to focus the signal photons into $\sim 0.2$ cm$^2$ spots that are imaged by ultra-low-background Micromegas x-ray detectors. The magnet is built into a structure with elevation and azimuth drives that will allow for solar tracking for $\sim$12 h each day.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2014-01-14 |