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Abstract
The search for Dark Matter (DM) has historically focused on Weakly Interacting Massive Particles (WIMPs) in the GeV to TeV mass range scattering off atomic nuclei. However, the absence of conclusive signals in direct detection experiments has motivated a theoretical and experimental shift toward the sub-GeV mass regime. Light Dark Matter (LDM), with masses between 1 MeV and 1 GeV, may not transfer sufficient momentum to generate detectable nuclear recoils but can efficiently scatter off electrons, resulting in ionization signals. This study explores emerging techniques for detecting LDM through electron recoils. We simulate and analyze the sensitivity limits of three distinct detector materials—Silicon (Si), Germanium (Ge), and Gallium Arsenide (GaAs)—integrating advanced phonon-mediated readout strategies. By modeling the dielectric response and band structure of these materials, we project event rates and background rejection capabilities. Our results indicate that while Silicon remains a robust baseline, polar materials like GaAs offer enhanced sensitivity to dark photon-mediated scattering at masses below 10 MeV due to their unique phonon-electron coupling properties. Furthermore, we discuss the efficacy of Transition Edge Sensors (TES) versus Microwave Kinetic Inductance Detectors (MKIDs) in resolving single-electron events, concluding that next-generation designs must prioritize lowering the energy threshold to the bandgap limit to probe the thermal relic milestone.Introduction
The existence of Dark Matter (DM) is supported by a wealth of astrophysical and cosmological evidence, ranging from galactic rotation curves to the temperature anisotropies of the Cosmic Microwave Background (Planck Collaboration, 2020). Despite this gravitational evidence, the particle nature of DM remains one of the most significant open questions in fundamental sciences. For decades, the leading paradigm has been the Weakly Interacting Massive Particle (WIMP), motivated by the “WIMP miracle,” which suggests that a stable particle with a weak-scale interaction cross-section and mass would naturally achieve the observed relic density (Bertone, Hooper, & Silk, 2005). However, current generations of multi-ton liquid xenon and argon detectors, such as XENONnT and LZ, have placed stringent constraints on WIMP-nucleon scattering cross-sections, pushing sensitivities near the “neutrino floor”—the irreducible background from coherent neutrino-nucleus scattering (Aprile et al., 2018; Aalbers et al., 2022). The null results in the heavy WIMP sector have spurred interest in “Hidden Sector” theories, where DM interacts with the Standard Model via a new light mediator, such as a dark photon or a scalar boson. These models naturally predict lighter DM candidates, referred to as Light Dark Matter (LDM), typically in the MeV to GeV mass range (Essig, Mardon, & Volansky, 2012). Detecting sub-GeV particles presents a kinematic challenge for traditional nuclear recoil experiments. The maximum energy transferTheoretical Framework
To accurately simulate the sensitivity of a detector to sub-GeV DM, one must model the rate of DM-electron scattering. Unlike nuclear scattering, which can often be treated as a billiard-ball collision, electron scattering in crystals requires a detailed understanding of the electron’s momentum wavefunction and the crystal lattice response. The differential event rate for DM-electron scattering is given by:-
is the local DM density (typically taken as 0.3 or 0.4 GeV/cm³).
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is the DM mass.
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is the number of unit cells in the target.
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is the momentum transfer.
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is the recoil energy of the electron.
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represents the crystal form factor, encapsulating the transition probability from the valence band to the conduction band.
Methodology
This study utilizes a Monte Carlo simulation framework to estimate the background-free sensitivity curves for three target materials: Silicon (Si), Germanium (Ge), and Gallium Arsenide (GaAs).3.1 Target Material Characterization
The choice of target material defines the kinematic threshold of the experiment. The minimum energy required to create a detectable signal is the bandgap energy (| Material |
Bandgap ( |
Average Energy per Pair ( |
Crystal Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| Silicon (Si) | 1.12 eV | 3.6 eV | Non-polar Indirect |
| Germanium (Ge) | 0.67 eV | 2.9 eV | Non-polar Indirect |
| Gallium Arsenide (GaAs) | 1.42 eV | 4.2 eV | Polar Direct |
3.2 Simulation Parameters
We utilized the
DarkELF
code package (Knapen et al., 2017) to calculate the scattering rates. The simulation assumed the Standard Halo Model (SHM) with the following parameters:
-
Local DM density:
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Most probable velocity:
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Galactic escape velocity:
3.3 Background and Detector Noise Modeling
To determine sensitivity limits, we modeled the “single-electron” background. In sub-GeV searches, the signal often consists of one or two electron-hole pairs. The primary background sources modeled were: 1. **Leakage Current (Dark Count Rate – DCR):** We assumed a DCR ofResults
4.1 Differential Event Rates
The simulation results for the differential event rates as a function of recoil energy (4.2 Projected Sensitivity Limits
We derived the 90% confidence level (C.L.) exclusion limits. The exclusion curve represents the minimum cross-section4.3 Readout Comparison: TES vs. MKID
The choice of readout heavily influences the “effective” threshold.-
**Transition Edge Sensors (TES):** Our modeling of TES response (based on SuperCDMS specifications) shows excellent energy resolution (
eV). This allows for discrimination between 1-electron and 2-electron events, essentially eliminating readout noise as a dominant factor. However, TES arrays are complex to fabricate and have slower time constants.
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**MKIDs:** While offering easier multiplexing (readout of thousands of pixels on a single line), the simulated resolution for MKIDs (
eV for current phonon-sensitive designs) compromised the ability to distinguish single quanta near the threshold. The simulations showed that MKID-based detectors required a factor of 10 higher exposure to achieve the same sensitivity limit as TES-based detectors in the 1–5 MeV mass range due to leakage of noise into the signal region.
Discussion
The results of this study underscore the necessity of matching the target material to the specific theoretical region of interest within the sub-GeV domain. While Silicon serves as a mature, technologically advanced baseline—exemplified by the success of SENSEI (Barak et al., 2020)—it faces kinematic limitations for DM masses below 5 MeV. The superior performance of Germanium in the low-mass regime suggests that Ge-based experiments, such as CDEX or future SuperCDMS-Ge upgrades, are critical for probing the “thermal relic” target line for the lightest LDM candidates. However, Germanium detectors often suffer from higher dark current rates compared to Silicon, a technological hurdle that must be addressed through improved surface passivation and lower operating temperatures. A significant finding of this work is the confirmation of the potential of Gallium Arsenide. Consistent with theoretical predictions by Griffin et al. (2018), our simulations show that the polar nature of GaAs provides a “boost” factor. This implies that for a specific class of models (dark photon mediators), a smaller mass of GaAs could rival a larger mass of Silicon. This motivates further R&D into high-purity GaAs crystals, which historically suffer from higher impurity concentrations than Si or Ge. **Backgrounds and Environmental Noise:** The study assumed a flat “dark count” background. In reality, low-energy backgrounds are complex. Radiogenic backgrounds (Compton scattering) are generally manageable, but “heat-only” events (micro-fractures in crystals creating phonon bursts) are a notorious plague in cryogenic detectors (Agnese et al., 2018). Furthermore, environmental electromagnetic interference (EMI) can induce signals mimicking low-energy recoils. The transition to single-electron sensitivity requires shielding and vibration isolation far exceeding current standards. **Broader Implications for Detector Design:** The analysis of readout strategies suggests a trade-off between scalability and resolution. While MKIDs allow for massive detector arrays (increasing total target mass), their resolution currently limits their utility for the absolute lowest mass thresholds where single-electron discrimination is vital. For the immediate future, TES-based athermal phonon sensors or Skipper-CCDs remain the optimal choice for threshold reduction.Conclusion
This study investigated the potential of sub-GeV Dark Matter detection via electron recoil interactions, providing a comparative analysis of Silicon, Germanium, and Gallium Arsenide targets. Our simulations demonstrate that shifting focus from nuclear to electron recoil opens a vast window into the 1 MeV – 1 GeV mass range. We conclude that: 1. **Germanium** is the superior candidate for pushing the kinematic threshold to its absolute minimum (References
📊 Citation Verification Summary
Aalbers, J., et al. (LZ Collaboration). (2022). First dark matter search results from the LUX-ZEPLIN (LZ) experiment. Physical Review Letters, 131(4), 041002. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.131.041002
Agnese, R., et al. (SuperCDMS Collaboration). (2018). First dark matter constraints from a SuperCDMS single-charge sensitive detector. Physical Review Letters, 121(5), 051301. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.121.051301
Aprile, E., et al. (XENON Collaboration). (2018). Dark matter search results from a one ton-year exposure of XENON1T. Physical Review Letters, 121(11), 111302. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.121.111302
Barak, L., et al. (SENSEI Collaboration). (2020). SENSEI: Direct-detection results on sub-GeV dark matter from a new Skipper-CCD. Physical Review Letters, 125(17), 171802. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.125.171802
Bertone, G., Hooper, D., & Silk, J. (2005). Particle dark matter: Evidence, candidates and constraints. Physics Reports, 405(5-6), 279-390. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.physrep.2004.08.031
Essig, R., Mardon, J., & Volansky, T. (2012). Direct detection of sub-GeV dark matter. Physical Review D, 85(7), 076007. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.85.076007
Graham, P. W., Kaplan, D. E., Rajendran, S., & Walters, M. T. (2012). Semiconductor probes of light dark matter. Physics of the Dark Universe, 1(1), 32-49. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dark.2012.09.001
Griffin, S. M., Knapen, S., Lin, T., & Zurek, K. M. (2018). Directional detection of light dark matter with polar materials. Physical Review D, 98(11), 115034. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.98.115034
Knapen, S., Lin, T., & Zurek, K. M. (2017). Light dark matter in superfluid helium: Detection with multi-excitation production. Physical Review D, 95(5), 056019. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.95.056019
Planck Collaboration. (2020). Planck 2018 results. VI. Cosmological parameters. Astronomy & Astrophysics, 641, A6. https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201833910
Tiffenberg, J., Sofo-Haro, M., Drlica-Wagner, A., Essig, R., Guardincerri, Y., Holland, S., … & Volansky, T. (2017). Single-electron and single-photon sensitivity with a silicon Skipper CCD. Physical Review Letters, 119(13), 131802. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.119.131802
Reviews
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Review #1 (December 2025): Anonymous
Evidence & Citations (sources, references): Excellent / Strong
Methodology / Approach (experimental, conceptual, theoretical, interpretive): Satisfactory / Minor Issues
Reasoning & Argumentation (logic, coherence): Excellent / Strong
Structure & Clarity (organization, readability): Satisfactory / Minor Issues
Originality & Insight (novelty, new perspectives): Satisfactory / Minor Issues
Ethics & Responsible Use (ethical concerns, transparency): Satisfactory / Minor Issues
Review and Evaluation: The appearance of the manuscript looks very reasonable and the statements and references are sound. However, the validity of the conclusions is difficult to assess unless the calculations are reproduced using the DarkELF code package (Knapen et al., 2017). I recommend that any further investigation begin by running the DarkELF code to replicate the reported results.
