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    Home»Nanotechnology»ATLAS narrows the hunt for dark matter – Physics World
    Nanotechnology

    ATLAS narrows the hunt for dark matter – Physics World

    AdminBy AdminFebruary 1, 2026No Comments2 Mins Read5 Views
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    ATLAS narrows the hunt for dark matter – Physics World
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    A new search for emerging jets at CERN has ruled out key dark sector scenarios

    Collider image

    Collider image (Courtesy: iStock/Koto Feja)

    Researchers at the ATLAS collaboration have been searching for signs of new particles in the dark sector of the universe, a hidden realm that could help explain dark matter. In some theories, this sector contains dark quarks (fundamental particles) that undergo a shower and hadronization process, forming long-lived dark mesons (dark quarks and antiquarks bound by a new dark strong force), which eventually decay into ordinary particles. These decays would appear in the detector as unusual “emerging jets”: bursts of particles originating from displaced vertices relative to the primary collision point.

    Using 51.8 fb⁻¹ of proton–proton collision data at 13.6 TeV collected in 2022–2023, the ATLAS team looked for events containing two such emerging jets. They explored two possible production mechanisms, which are a vector mediator (Z′) produced in the s‑channel and a scalar mediator (Φ) exchanged in the t‑channel. The analysis combined two complementary strategies. A cut-based strategy relying on high-level jet observables, including track-, vertex-, and jet-substructure-based selections, enables a straightforward reinterpretation for alternative theoretical models. A machine learning approach employs a per-jet tagger using a transformer architecture trained on low-level tracking variables to discriminate emerging from Standard Model jets, maximizing sensitivity for the specific models studied.

    No emerging‑jet signal excess was found, but the search set the first direct limits on emerging‑jet production via a Z′ mediator and the first constraints on t‑channel Φ production. Depending on the model assumptions, Z′ masses up to around 2.5 TeV and Φ masses up to about 1.35 TeV are excluded. These results significantly narrow the space in which dark sector particles could exist and form part of a broader ATLAS programme to probe dark quantum chromodynamics. The work sharpens future searches for dark matter and advances our understanding of how a dark sector might behave.

    Do you want to learn more about this topic?

    Dark matter and dark energy interactions: theoretical challenges, cosmological implications and observational signatures by B Wang, E Abdalla, F Atrio-Barandela and D Pavón (2016)



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