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arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2017

The GAPS experiment to search for dark matter using low-energy antimatter

R. A. Ong; T. Aramaki; R. Bird; Mirko Boezio; S. E. Boggs; R. Carr; William W. Craig; Philip von Doetinchem; Lorenzo Fabris; F. Gahbauer; Cory Gerrity; H. Fuke; Charles J. Hailey; C. Kato; A. Kawachi; M. Kozai; S.I. Mognet; K. Munakata; Shun Okazaki; Giuseppe Osteria; K. Perez; V. Re; Field Rogers; Nate Saffold; Yuki Shimizu; Atsumasa Yoshida; T. Yoshida; G. Zampa; Jeff Zweerink

The GAPS experiment is designed to carry out a sensitive dark matter search by measuring low-energy cosmic ray antideuterons and antiprotons. GAPS will provide a new avenue to access a wide range of dark matter models and masses that is complementary to direct detection techniques, collider experiments and other indirect detection techniques. Well-motivated theories beyond the Standard Model contain viable dark matter candidates which could lead to a detectable signal of antideuterons resulting from the annihilation or decay of dark matter particles. The dark matter contribution to the antideuteron flux is believed to be especially large at low energies (E < 1 GeV), where the predicted flux from conventional astrophysical sources (i.e. from secondary interactions of cosmic rays) is very low. The GAPS low-energy antiproton search will provide stringent constraints on less than 10 GeV dark matter, will provide the best limits on primordial black hole evaporation on Galactic length scales, and will explore new discovery space in cosmic ray physics. Unlike other antimatter search experiments such as BESS and AMS that use magnetic spectrometers, GAPS detects antideuterons and antiprotons using an exotic atom technique. This technique, and its unique event topology, will give GAPS a nearly background-free detection capability that is critical in a rare-event search. GAPS is designed to carry out its science program using long-duration balloon flights in Antarctica. A prototype instrument was successfully flown from Taiki, Japan in 2012. GAPS has now been approved by NASA to proceed towards the full science instrument, with the possibility of a first long-duration balloon flight in late 2020. Here we motivate low-energy cosmic ray antimatter searches and discuss the current status of the GAPS experiment and the design of the payload.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2018

Fabrication of low-cost, large-area prototype Si(Li) detectors for the GAPS experiment

Kerstin Perez; Tsuguo Aramaki; Charles J. Hailey; R. Carr; Tyler Erjavec; H. Fuke; Amani M. Garvin; Cassia Harper; Glenn Kewley; N. Madden; Sarah Mechbal; Field Rogers; Nathan Saffold; Gordon Tajiri; Katsuhiko Tokuda; Jason Williams; Minoru Yamada

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Field Rogers

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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H. Fuke

Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency

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Kerstin Perez

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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