Rare Particle Searches with the high altitude SLIM experiment
/ Authors
S. Balestra, S. Cecchini, F. Fabbri, G. Giacomelli, R. Giacomelli, M. Giorgini, A. Kumar, S. Manzoor, J. Mcdonald, A. Margiotta
and 13 more authors
E. Medinaceli, J. Nogales, L. Patrizii, V. Popa, I. Quereshi, O. Saavedra, G. Sher, M. Shahzad, M. Spurio, R. Ticona, V. Togo, A. Velarde, A. Zanini
/ Abstract
The search for rare particles in the cosmic radiation remains one of the main aims of non-accelerator particle astrophysics. Experiments at high altitude allow lower mass thresholds with respect to detectors at sea level or underground. The SLIM experiment is a large array of nuclear track detectors located at the Chacaltaya High Altitude Laboratory (5290 m a.s.l.). The preliminary results from the analysis of a part of the first 236 sq.m exposed for more than 3.6 y are here reported. The detector is sensitive to Intermediate Mass Magnetic Monopoles and to SQM nuggets and Q-balls, which are possible Dark Matter candidates.
Journal: arXiv: High Energy Physics - Experiment
DOI: 10.22323/1.021.0018