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Quantum Sensors for the Hidden Sector (QSHS) - A Summary of Our First Year!

22 November 2022, Version 1
This item is a response to a research question in Quantum Technologies
Q. How can quantum technologies be used for testing fundamental physics?

Abstract

In 2021 the Quantum Sensors for the Hidden Sector (QSHS) collaboration was founded in the UK. We received funding as part of the Quantum Technologies for Fundamental Physics programme to develop and demonstrate quantum devices with the potential to detect hidden-sector particles such as axions and dark photons in the ~1μeV/c^2 to ~100μeV/c^2 mass window. Our collaboration is formed from a diverse community of condensed matter physicists, quantum technologists, theorists and (astro) particle physics experimentalists. We are designing and fabricating a range of “quantum devices” and constructing a high-field, low-temperature facility at the University of Sheffield to characterise and test the devices in an axion haloscope geometry, initially using an rf cavity. This poster was presented at the 17th Patras workshop on axions, WIMPs and WISPs on the 8th August 2022 in Mainz, Germany.

Keywords

axion
dark matter
quantum technology
hidden sector

Supplementary weblinks

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