An ultralight scalar field is one of the dark matter candidates. If it couples with Standard Model particles, it oscillates mirrors in gravitational-wave detectors and generates detectable signals. We study… Click to show full abstract
An ultralight scalar field is one of the dark matter candidates. If it couples with Standard Model particles, it oscillates mirrors in gravitational-wave detectors and generates detectable signals. We study the spectra of the signals taking into account the motion of the detectors due to the Earth's rotation/the detectors' orbital motion around the Sun and formulate a suitable data-analysis method to detect it. We find that our method can improve the existing constraints given by fifth-force experiments on one of the scalar field's coupling constants by a factor of $\sim 30$, $\sim 100$ and $\sim 350$ for $m_\phi = 2 \times 10^{-17}~\mathrm{eV},~10^{-14}~\mathrm{eV}$ and $10^{-12}~\mathrm{eV}$ respectively, where $m_\phi$ is the scalar field's mass. Our study demonstrates that experiments with gravitational-wave detectors play a complementary role to that Equivalence Principle tests do.
               
Click one of the above tabs to view related content.