[2025-01-18] For better promotion of the events, the categories in this system will be adjusted. For details, please refer to the announcement of this system. The link is https://indico-tdli.sjtu.edu.cn/news/1-warm-reminder-on-adjusting-indico-tdli-categories-indico

Seminars 李政道研究所-粒子核物理研究所联合演讲

In Search of Cosmic-Ray Antinuclei from Dark Matter with the GAPS Experiment

by Dr Mengjiao Xiao(肖梦姣) (n Massachusetts Institute of Technology)

Asia/Shanghai
https://zoom.com.cn/j/62843773745 (password:822737)

https://zoom.com.cn/j/62843773745 (password:822737)

Description

Abstract

The General Antiparticle Spectrometer (GAPS) is a balloon-borne experiment designed to identify cosmic antinuclei, in particular antideuterons from dark matter annihilation or decay, using the uniquely characterized atomic X-rays and charged particles from the decay of exotic atoms. With such a novel detection approach, benefitting from a custom-developed large-area silicon tracker and a large-acceptance Time-of-Flight system, GAPS is sensitive to antideuterons and even antiheliums with the kinetic energy <0.25 GeV/nucleon, which should offer an essentially background-free region to probe various dark matter models. Additionally, one long duration balloon flight allows GAPS to collect a high-statistics antiproton spectrum in an unexplored energy range. The GAPS project is currently under construction. The first flight of GAPS is scheduled for late 2022 from McMurdo Station in Antarctica, and two follow-up Antarctic flights are planned. This talk will present the science impact of the GAPS experiment, while focusing on its novel detection principle, conceptual design, details of construction and the path forward to the initial flight.

Biography

Dr. Mengjiao Xiao graduated from SJTU on 2016 under the supervision of Prof. Jianglai Liu. He played vital roles in the PandaX-I construction, commissioning and data analysis, and was the lead authors of the first results from PandaX. Dr. Xiao’s thesis work was selected as one of the finalists of the Chen Guang Award of the High Energy Physics subpanel of CPS. After graduation, he was a postdoc first at Univ. of Maryland working on the JUNO neutrino experiment for two years, then moved to MIT to work on the GAPS space experiment, performing indirect search of dark matter using cosmic antinuclei.

Seminar video:  https://vshare.sjtu.edu.cn/play/560b2d965f1a2ece0a9f4e4022cf30a6