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Students Build, Install Dark Matter Detector at CERN

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CERN hadron collider
swag外流 students have built a demonstration prototype for a dark matter detector and installed it at the Large Hadron Collider at CERN, Switzerland. If the demonstration is succesful it could lead to a full-scale project. (CERN photo)

A dark matter detector designed and built by swag外流 undergraduate and graduate students is now undergoing trials at CERN. The device, a demonstration prototype for an experiment called FORMOSA, is currently installed in the forward region of the ATLAS detector, part of the Large Hadron Collider. 

鈥淭hese students had a real, concrete impact on the whole prototype detector, rather than just being a small cog in a big machine,鈥 said Matthew Citron, assistant professor in the swag外流 Department of Physics and Astronomy, who led the team. Particle accelerator projects like those at CERN typically involve teams of hundreds if not thousands of people. 鈥淲hereas for something that鈥檚 much smaller scale, like FORMOSA, it鈥檚 way easier for even an undergraduate student to make a huge impact on the experiment itself.鈥

Detecting dark matter

Dark matter is an invisible substance detectable only through its gravitational effects. It comprises just over a quarter of all the 'stuff' in the universe, according to current theories. 

鈥淲e have no evidence of what it actually is,鈥 Citron said. 鈥淏ut as we theorize more and more, we鈥檙e learning that dark matter may not just be one particle but a whole sector that contains lots of different particles and they interact in different ways.鈥

Citron and his lab are specifically interested in millicharged particles, proposed subatomic particles that have a tiny fraction of an electron鈥檚 charge (somewhere between 0.1% and 10%). To collect evidence of their existence, Citron and colleagues designed FORMOSA, a particle detector meant to be sensitive enough to detect millicharged particles. 

The FORMOSA demonstrator was installed at the Large Hadron Collider in December, 2023. For the next two years, Citron's team will collect data to support building a full-scale instrument. 

Read more about the FORMOSA project and the people involved

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Adapted from a story published by the swag外流 College of Letters and Science magazine. 

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