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Dive into the research topics where G. Rybka is active.

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Featured researches published by G. Rybka.


Physical Review Letters | 2010

SQUID-Based Microwave Cavity Search for Dark-Matter Axions

S.J. Asztalos; G. Carosi; C. Hagmann; D. Kinion; K. van Bibber; M. Hotz; L.J. Rosenberg; G. Rybka; J. Hoskins; Jungseek Hwang; P. Sikivie; D. B. Tanner; Richard Bradley; John Clarke

Axions in the microeV mass range are a plausible cold dark-matter candidate and may be detected by their conversion into microwave photons in a resonant cavity immersed in a static magnetic field. We report the first result from such an axion search using a superconducting first-stage amplifier (SQUID) replacing a conventional GaAs field-effect transistor amplifier. This experiment excludes KSVZ dark-matter axions with masses between 3.3 microeV and 3.53 microeV and sets the stage for a definitive axion search utilizing near quantum-limited SQUID amplifiers.


Physical Review Letters | 2010

Search for Hidden Sector Photons with the ADMX Detector

A. Wagner; G. Rybka; M. Hotz; L.J. Rosenberg; S.J. Asztalos; G. Carosi; C. Hagmann; D. Kinion; K. van Bibber; J. Hoskins; C. Martin; P. Sikivie; D. B. Tanner; Richard Bradley; John E. Hughes Clarke

Hidden U(1) gauge symmetries are common to many extensions of the standard model proposed to explain dark matter. The hidden gauge vector bosons of such extensions may mix kinetically with standard model photons, providing a means for electromagnetic power to pass through conducting barriers. The axion dark matter experiment detector was used to search for hidden vector bosons originating in an emitter cavity driven with microwave power. We exclude hidden vector bosons with kinetic couplings χ>3.48×10⁻⁸ for masses less than 3  μeV. This limit represents an improvement of more than 2 orders of magnitude in sensitivity relative to previous cavity experiments.


Physical Review D | 2011

Search for nonvirialized axionic dark matter

J. Hoskins; Jungseek Hwang; C. Martin; P. Sikivie; N. S. Sullivan; D. B. Tanner; M. Hotz; L.J. Rosenberg; G. Rybka; A. Wagner; S.J. Asztalos; G. Carosi; C. Hagmann; D. Kinion; K. van Bibber; Richard Bradley; John Clarke

Cold dark matter in the Milky Way halo may have structure defined by flows with low velocity dispersion. The Axion Dark Matter eXperiment high resolution channel is especially sensitive to axions in such low velocity dispersion flows. Results from a combined power spectra analysis of the high resolution channel axion search are presented along with a discussion of the assumptions underlying such an analysis. We exclude Kim-Shifman-Vainshtein-Zakharov axion dark matter densities of � * 0:2 GeV=cm 3 and Dine-Fischler-Srednicki-Zhitnitskii densities of � * 1:4 GeV=cm 3 over a mass range of ma ¼ 3:3 � eV to 3:69 � eV for models having velocity dispersions of � � & 3 � 10 � 6 .


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Single-electron detection and spectroscopy via relativistic cyclotron radiation

D. M. Asner; R. F. Bradley; L. de Viveiros; P. J. Doe; Justin L. Fernandes; M Fertl; Erin C. Finn; Joseph A. Formaggio; D. Furse; A M Jones; J. N. Kofron; B H LaRoque; M. Leber; E.L. McBride; Michael Miller; Prajwal Mohanmurthy; B. Monreal; N.S. Oblath; R. G. H. Robertson; L.J. Rosenberg; G. Rybka; D. Rysewyk; Matthew Sternberg; Jonathan R. Tedeschi; Brent A. VanDevender; N. L. Woods

It has been understood since 1897 that accelerating charges must emit electromagnetic radiation. Although first derived in 1904, cyclotron radiation from a single electron orbiting in a magnetic field has never been observed directly. We demonstrate single-electron detection in a novel radio-frequency spectrometer. The relativistic shift in the cyclotron frequency permits a precise electron energy measurement. Precise beta electron spectroscopy from gaseous radiation sources is a key technique in modern efforts to measure the neutrino mass via the tritium decay end point, and this work demonstrates a fundamentally new approach to precision beta spectroscopy for future neutrino mass experiments.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2011

Design and performance of the ADMX SQUID-based microwave receiver

Stephen John Asztalos; G. Carosi; C. Hagmann; D. Kinion; K. van Bibber; M. Hotz; L.J. Rosenberg; G. Rybka; A. Wagner; J. Hoskins; Cliff G. Martin; N. S. Sullivan; D. B. Tanner; Richard Bradley; John Clarke

The article of record as published may be located at http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nima.2011.07.019


Physical Review Letters | 2010

Search for Chameleon Scalar Fields with the Axion Dark Matter Experiment

G. Rybka; M. Hotz; L.J. Rosenberg; S.J. Asztalos; G. Carosi; C. Hagmann; D. Kinion; K. van Bibber; J. Hoskins; C. Martin; P. Sikivie; D. B. Tanner; Richard Bradley; John E. Hughes Clarke

Scalar fields with a chameleon property, in which the effective particle mass is a function of its local environment, are common to many theories beyond the standard model and could be responsible for dark energy. If these fields couple weakly to the photon, they could be detectable through the afterglow effect of photon-chameleon-photon transitions. The ADMX experiment was used in the first chameleon search with a microwave cavity to set a new limit on scalar chameleon-photon coupling beta_gamma excluding values between 2x109 and 5x1014 for effective chameleon masses between 1.9510 and 1:9525 micro eV.


Physical Review Letters | 2018

Search for Invisible Axion Dark Matter with the Axion Dark Matter Experiment

N. Du; N. Force; R. Khatiwada; E. Lentz; R. S. Ottens; L.J. Rosenberg; G. Rybka; G. Carosi; N. Woollett; D. Bowring; A. S. Chou; A. Sonnenschein; W. Wester; C. Boutan; N. S. Oblath; Richard Bradley; E. J. Daw; A. V. Dixit; John Clarke; S. O’Kelley; N. Crisosto; J. Gleason; S. Jois; P. Sikivie; I. Stern; N. S. Sullivan; D. B. Tanner; G. C. Hilton

This Letter reports the results from a haloscope search for dark matter axions with masses between 2.66 and 2.81  μeV. The search excludes the range of axion-photon couplings predicted by plausible models of the invisible axion. This unprecedented sensitivity is achieved by operating a large-volume haloscope at subkelvin temperatures, thereby reducing thermal noise as well as the excess noise from the ultralow-noise superconducting quantum interference device amplifier used for the signal power readout. Ongoing searches will provide nearly definitive tests of the invisible axion model over a wide range of axion masses.


Physical Review D | 2016

Modulation sensitive search for nonvirialized dark-matter axions

J. Hoskins; N. Crisosto; J. Gleason; P. Sikivie; I. Stern; N. S. Sullivan; D. B. Tanner; C. Boutan; M. Hotz; R. Khatiwada; D. Lyapustin; A. Malagon; R. S. Ottens; L.J. Rosenberg; G. Rybka; J.V. Sloan; A. Wagner; D. Will; G. Carosi; D. Carter; Leanne D. Duffy; Richard Bradley; John Clarke; S. O’Kelley; K. van Bibber; E. J. Daw

Non-virialized dark-matter axions may be present in the Milky Way halo in the form of low-velocity-dispersion flows. The Axion Dark Matter eXperiment performed a search for the conversion of these axions into microwave photons using a resonant cavity immersed in a strong, static magnetic field. The spread of photon energy in these measurements was measured at spectral resolutions of the order of 1 Hz and below. If the energy variation were this small, the frequency modulation of any real axion signal due to the orbital and rotational motion of the Earth would become non-negligible. Conservative estimates of the expected signal modulation were made and used as a guide for the search procedure. The photon frequencies covered by this search are 812


arXiv: Instrumentation and Detectors | 2017

Project 8 Phase III Design Concept

A Ashtari Esfahani; S. Böser; C Claessens; L. de Viveiros; P. J. Doe; S Doeleman; M Fertl; Erin C. Finn; Joseph A. Formaggio; M Guigue; K. M. Heeger; A M Jones; K. Kazkaz; B H LaRoque; E Machado; B. Monreal; J.A. Nikkel; N.S. Oblath; R. G. H. Robertson; L.J. Rosenberg; G. Rybka; L Saldaña; P L Slocum; Jonathan R. Tedeschi; Brent A. VanDevender; M Wachtendonk; Jonathan Weintroub; André Young; E Zayas

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arXiv: Instrumentation and Detectors | 2017

Results from the Project 8 phase-1 cyclotron radiation emission spectroscopy detector

A Ashtari Esfahani; S. Böser; C Claessens; L. de Viveiros; P. J. Doe; S Doeleman; M Fertl; Erin C. Finn; Joseph A. Formaggio; M Guigue; K. M. Heeger; A M Jones; K. Kazkaz; B H LaRoque; E Machado; B. Monreal; J.A. Nikkel; N.S. Oblath; R. G. H. Robertson; L.J. Rosenberg; G. Rybka; L Saldaña; P L Slocum; Jonathan R. Tedeschi; Brent A. VanDevender; M Wachtendonk; Jonathan Weintroub; André Young; E Zayas

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G. Carosi

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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L.J. Rosenberg

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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M. Hotz

University of Washington

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Richard Bradley

National Radio Astronomy Observatory

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D. Kinion

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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K. van Bibber

University of California

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C. Hagmann

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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