Abstract
Abstract
We consider the scattering of low-mass halo dark-matter particles in the hot plasma of the
Sun, focusing on dark matter that interact with ordinary matter through a dark-photon mediator.
The resulting “solar-reflected” dark matter (SRDM) component contains high-velocity particles,
which significantly extend the sensitivity of terrestrial direct-detection experiments to sub-MeV
dark-matter masses. We use a detailed Monte Carlo simulation to model the propagation and
scattering of dark-matter particles in the Sun, including thermal effects, with special emphasis
on ultralight dark-photon mediators. We study the properties of the SRDM flux, obtain exclusion
limits from various direct-detection experiments, and provide projections for future experiments,
focusing especially on those with silicon and xenon targets. We find that proposed future
experiments with xenon and silicon targets can probe the entire “freeze-in benchmark”, in which
dark matter is coupled to an ultralight dark photon, including dark-matter masses as low as
𝒪(keV). Our simulations and SRDM fluxes are publicly available.
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