| Literature DB >> 33891466 |
Deniz Aybas1,2, Janos Adam1, Emmy Blumenthal1, Alexander V Gramolin1, Dorian Johnson1, Annalies Kleyheeg1, Samer Afach3,4, John W Blanchard3, Gary P Centers3,4, Antoine Garcon3,4, Martin Engler3,4, Nataniel L Figueroa3,4, Marina Gil Sendra3,4, Arne Wickenbrock3,4, Matthew Lawson5,6, Tao Wang7, Teng Wu8, Haosu Luo9, Hamdi Mani10, Philip Mauskopf10, Peter W Graham11, Surjeet Rajendran12, Derek F Jackson Kimball13, Dmitry Budker3,4,14, Alexander O Sushkov1,2,15.
Abstract
We report the results of an experimental search for ultralight axionlike dark matter in the mass range 162-166 neV. The detection scheme of our Cosmic Axion Spin Precession Experiment is based on a precision measurement of ^{207}Pb solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance in a polarized ferroelectric crystal. Axionlike dark matter can exert an oscillating torque on ^{207}Pb nuclear spins via the electric dipole moment coupling g_{d} or via the gradient coupling g_{aNN}. We calibrate the detector and characterize the excitation spectrum and relaxation parameters of the nuclear spin ensemble with pulsed magnetic resonance measurements in a 4.4 T magnetic field. We sweep the magnetic field near this value and search for axionlike dark matter with Compton frequency within a 1 MHz band centered at 39.65 MHz. Our measurements place the upper bounds |g_{d}|<9.5×10^{-4} GeV^{-2} and |g_{aNN}|<2.8×10^{-1} GeV^{-1} (95% confidence level) in this frequency range. The constraint on g_{d} corresponds to an upper bound of 1.0×10^{-21} e cm on the amplitude of oscillations of the neutron electric dipole moment and 4.3×10^{-6} on the amplitude of oscillations of CP-violating θ parameter of quantum chromodynamics. Our results demonstrate the feasibility of using solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance to search for axionlike dark matter in the neV mass range.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33891466 DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.126.141802
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Phys Rev Lett ISSN: 0031-9007 Impact factor: 9.161