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21–24 Aug 2018
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
US/Pacific timezone

The ORGAN Experiment

21 Aug 2018, 16:30
30m
LVOC - Yosemite Room (Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory)

LVOC - Yosemite Room

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

7000 East Ave L-780, Livermore, CA 94550

Speaker

Mr Ben McAllister (ARC Centre of Excellence for Engineered Quantum Systems, School of Physics, University of Western Australia)

Description

We discuss the current status of the ORGAN experiment, a high mass axion haloscope. The goal of ORGAN is to search the promising high axion mass regime, covering the range of masses proposed by the SMASH model, amongst other theoretical predictions. This talk will include a review of progress and results to date, then cover developments in cavity design and R&D, and the next science run of the primary haloscope experiment. Cavity R&D builds on our work on tunable super-mode dielectric resonators [1], with applications to the high-mass regime. These resonators can be designed to have scan rates improved by 1 to 2 orders of magnitude compared with simpler haloscope designs. The plans for the next experiment, which will operate in a new dedicated dilution refrigerator with a base temperature of 7 mK and a 14 T superconducting solenoid, will be discussed. We will also give an overview of some complementary experiments that are under development at UWA to operate alongside ORGAN, including wide mass range searches for axion-like particles. 1. Ben T. McAllister, Graeme Flower, Lucas E. Tobar, Michael E. Tobar, “Tunable Super-Mode Dielectric Resonators for Axion Haloscopes”, Phys. Rev. Applied 9, 014028 (2018)

Primary author

Mr Ben McAllister (ARC Centre of Excellence for Engineered Quantum Systems, School of Physics, University of Western Australia)

Co-authors

Dr Maxim Goryachev (University of Western Australia) Prof. Michael Tobar (The University of Western Australia)

Presentation materials