Real Clear Politics
 
Real Clear Science

 
January 30, 2014  
 
To Date, Particle Supercollider Detects No Evidence Of Dark  Matter
By _Charles Q.  Choi_ 
(http://www.realclearscience.com/authors/charles_q_choi/) 


Editor's Note: This article was provided by Inside Science. the original  
is _here_ 
(http://www.insidescience.org/content/date-particle-supercollider-detects-no-evidence-dark-matter/1545)
 . 
(ISNS) -- Dark matter is currently one of the greatest mysteries in the  
universe. Now, scientists reveal that the most powerful particle collider in 
the  world has unearthed no signs of the hypothesized dark matter, placing 
new limits  on what it could be. 
Dark matter is hypothesized to be an invisible, enigmatic substance thought 
 to make up roughly five-sixths of all matter in the cosmos. Astronomers 
began  suspecting its existence in the 1930s, when they noticed the universe 
seemed to  possess more mass than stars could account for. For instance, the 
speed at which  stars circle the center of the Milky Way is so fast they 
should overcome the  gravitational pull of the galaxy's core and escape into 
the intergalactic void,  but something is apparently holding them back, which 
most researchers believe is  the gravity of an unseen material called dark 
matter. 
Scientists have largely ruled out all known ordinary materials as 
candidates  for dark matter. The consensus so far is that dark matter would be 
made 
up of  new, invisible species of particles, which would interact only very 
weakly with  ordinary matter. 
Dark matter cannot be explained by any of the particles in the Standard 
Model  of particle physics, the best description there currently is of the 
subatomic  world. They must therefore arise from new physics beyond the 
Standard 
Model. One  possibility lies in an idea known as supersymmetry, which 
suggests all known  kinds of particles in the Standard Model have 
as-yet-undiscovered partners. For  example, electrons would have similar 
cousins, termed 
selectrons. Another  possibility is the existence of particles known as 
axions, which theoretical  physicists originally proposed to help solve a 
puzzle 
regarding the strong  nuclear force, one of the four fundamental forces in 
the universe, which binds  protons and neutrons together into atomic nuclei. 
Most hunts for dark matter involve giant underground detectors looking for  
rare collisions between ordinary matter and dark-matter particles streaming 
 through Earth. However, many theories suggest the most powerful particle  
accelerator yet, the Large Hadron Collider, could generate dark-matter  
particles. Although these dark-matter particles would escape through the  
machine's detectors unnoticed, scientists onsite at the LHC near Geneva,  
Switzerland, or those around the world who interpret the data, could infer the  
existence of dark matter by how other remnants of collisions behave. They could 
 
use the data from collisions to glean details about bits of dark matter, 
such as  their masses and their cross-sections — that is, how likely they 
interact with  other particles. 
Past searches for dark matter at LHC looked for single jets of particles 
that  result when protons are smashed together with unprecedented levels of 
energy.  During the 2012 LHC run, the ATLAS collaboration experimented with 
more complex  collisions generating not only a single large jet but two 
additional narrow  jets. 
These new findings strongly rule out a number of potential candidates for  
dark matter, research detailed online in the journal Physical Review 
Letters.  Specifically, this work "places interesting constraints on attempts 
to 
extend  the Standard Model of particle physics in a minimal way to explain 
dark matter,"  said astroparticle physicist Gianfranco Bertone at the 
University of Amsterdam,  who did not take part in this research. 
Although these findings rule out some possible candidates for dark matter, 
"I  don't think it actually produces a big problem for most dark-matter 
theories,  for the moment," said particle physicist Andreas Hoecker, deputy 
coordinator of  the ATLAS Experiment at CERN. "The best theory we have for dark 
matter,  supersymmetry, is not excluded by these results." 
Scientists are now upgrading the accelerators at the LHC. "In the middle of 
 2015, the accelerator will restart and be capable of almost twice more 
energy  than before," Hoecker said. That means future experiments "could look 
for the  formation of supersymmetry particles, such as squarks and gluinos 
and  neutralinos with much larger masses than previous data allowed." The LHC  
experiments are not expected to detect axions, since they theoretically 
have  very low cross-sections beyond the accelerator's capabilities. 
Moreover, in about 2022, the LHC should also upgrade to 10 times higher  
luminosity — that is, blast 10 times more protons at targets per run. This may 
 generate potential dark-matter particles in larger numbers than before, 
perhaps  enough to detect them despite how rarely they interact with other 
particles,  Hoecker added. 
If LHC does not detect anything even at higher energies and luminosities, 
"it  is very difficult to rule out supersymmetry models completely, but 
scientists  would probably lose interest," Bertone said. "Researchers would 
then 
likely have  to move to something different."

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