2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.physrep.2016.02.007
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A review of the discovery reach of directional Dark Matter detection

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Cited by 206 publications
(185 citation statements)
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References 222 publications
(320 reference statements)
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“…We can also show the direction from which the particles entered the Solar Neighborhood in the Earth Frame Coordinate system, which is of interest for directionally sensitive experiments [91]. Figure 4 illustrates the trajectories of high-speed DM particles in the Solar Neighborhood (v > 800 km/s in Earth Frame Coordinates) projected on Mollweide equal-area plots of the sky at two different times of year.…”
Section: Results: Dm Motions In the Vicinity Of The Sunmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We can also show the direction from which the particles entered the Solar Neighborhood in the Earth Frame Coordinate system, which is of interest for directionally sensitive experiments [91]. Figure 4 illustrates the trajectories of high-speed DM particles in the Solar Neighborhood (v > 800 km/s in Earth Frame Coordinates) projected on Mollweide equal-area plots of the sky at two different times of year.…”
Section: Results: Dm Motions In the Vicinity Of The Sunmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Such designs are currently in a research and development stage. They are of particular interest for the present analysis in that helium, and especially 3 He, is one of the target materials explored in this context [41,42]. For such a light target nucleus, ab initio nuclear structure calculations are straightforward, which allows a more robust uncertainty quantification.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The average direction of the WIMP wind through the solar system comes from the constellation of Cygnus, as the Sun is moving around the Galactic center. A measurement of the track direction of nuclear recoils could be used then to distinguish a dark matter signal from background events (expected to be uniformly distributed) and to prove the galactic origin of a possible signal [28,29,30]. The reconstruction of tracks is not easy, as they are very short for keV scale nuclear recoils: ∼1 mm in gas, ∼0.1 mm in solids.…”
Section: Directionalitymentioning
confidence: 99%