Results of Search for Magnetized Quark-Nugget Dark Matter from Radial Impacts on Earth
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. From Dark Matter to Quark Nuggets, Nuclearites, and MQNs
1.2. Theoretical Basis of Ferromagnetism in MQNs
1.3. From Ferromagnetism to MQN Stability and Mass Distribution
1.4. Comparison of MQN and Nuclearite Interaction Cross Sections
1.5. Estimated Observation Time for JEM-EUSO to Test MQN Hypothesis
1.6. Definition of Non-Meteorite Craters and Their Utility for Testing Dark-Matter Hypotheses
- (1)
- without an observable luminous streak,
- (2)
- without breakup in an air shower [28] and dispersal, so no crater is formed,
- (3)
- without meteorite material found in and/or around the impact site, and
- (4)
- without evidence of causation by human or other natural causes (e.g., the energetic release of methane from global warming), but
- (5)
- with sufficient energy deposition to form an impact crater.
- ~12-m diameter crater near Managua, Nicaragua, on 6 September 2014 [31].
- ~1-cm diameter crater in Rhode Island, USA, on 4 July 2015 [32].
- ~60-cm diameter crater in Tamil Nadu, India, on 6 February 2016 [33].
1.7. Significance of This Paper
1.8. Organization of the Paper
1.9. Declaration of Controversial Topic
1.10. Limitations of These Results
2. Materials and Methods
- computational 2D and 3D hydrodynamic simulations, as described in the results section and in movies of pressure, mass density, and temperature in supplementary dataset at https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.cc2fqz641 (accessed on 21 April 2021) and associated analyses of energy deposition in the multi-layers of peat bog in the results section;
- original field work at the location of a non-meteorite impact in May of 1985 in County Donegal, Ireland, and associated analyses in the results section;
- additional details in Appendix A: Excavations, to assist an independent team to extend our findings; and,
- potential sites in Appendix B: coordinates and description of deformations in peat-bog survey, for future investigations if suitable sensor technology can be developed.
3. Results
3.1. Hydrodynamic Simulation of MQN Impact in Three-Layer Witness Plate
3.2. Potential for Liquefaction and Flow of the Clay-Sand Layer
3.3. Simulations on Circularity of MQN Crater as a Function of Entrance Angle
3.4. Non-Meteorite Crater in May 1985 Near Glendowan, County Donegal, Ireland
3.5. Excavations of the 1985 Non-Meteorite Crater in County Donegal, Ireland
3.6. Potential for Independent Validation of the 1985 Event
3.7. Additional Limit on Bo to ≥ 4 × 1011 T
3.8. Event Rate of Non-Meteorite Cratering Events and Duplicative Constraint on Bo
4. Discussion
4.1. Consistency with MQN Impact
- The 4-m diameter crater is consistent with CTH simulations of ~80 MJ/m energy deposition. That energy/length is consistent with a 10 +/− 7 kg MQN with 4 × 1011 T ≤ Bo ≤ 3 × 1012 T. It is not consistent with a meteorite, because no meteorite material was found and because the crater diameter is much too small to be within the range of meteorite craters. Meteorites must be either very aerodynamically shaped, which is very unlikely, or be at least ~20-m diameter to be large enough to survive the transit through the atmosphere and create an impact crater. Meteorite craters are typically an order of magnitude larger in diameter than the meteorites that make them, so meteorites are usually found in craters with diameter ~200 m or larger. The smallest diameter crater associated with a meteorite in the last century impacted in 2007 at Caranacas, Peru. It was 13.5-m in diameter. The crater was at an altitude of 3500 m. Its small diameter may be attributed to its not having to survive the densest part of the atmosphere. Non-meteorite craters are reported in the press approximately annually and are less than 12-m diameter, as noted in the Introduction. The lack of overlapping size and event rate suggests that craters, like the one studied in this paper, must be caused by a phenomenon other than a meteorite.
- The CTH simulations show that the crater sides are formed by shear-planes and are smooth, as independently reported by the two Rangers investigating the day after the event. We found that smooth sides are in stark contrast to the irregular sides of craters that are produced by large explosives on the surface of the peat bog, so smooth crater sides are a distinguishing point of comparison.
- The CTH simulations show that chunks of ejecta have sufficient velocity to be thrown clear of the site. Rangers reported the ejecta landed ≥10 m from the crater. The photograph presented in Figure 5 shows no ejecta near the crater, which confirms their report.
- The “pointy depression” at the center of the crater bottom is consistent with the computed channel through the soft sediments and subsequent flow of material. Because the water-saturated soft sediments below the peat met all of the requirements for liquefaction [39] by the impact, the soft sediments must have liquefied and flowed back into the void to refill the central channel that is shown in Figure 3. Refilling would have occurred from the bottom, where the pressure from the overburden is the greatest, to the top. When the overburden pressure becomes too small to overcome viscosity, a “pointy” depression should remain, as observed on the day following the impact.
- A volume of shattered granite was only found at 4.7-m depth and within the projected impact trajectory at 15° from vertical. All 10 boulders that were found outside the trajectory were intact. The uniqueness of the shattered granite and its location indicates the hypervelocity body that caused the crater in the peat layer also shattered the granite boulder at 4.7-m depth. Passage through the 0.7-m peat layer and 4.0-m soft-sediment layer with sufficient residual velocity to shatter the granite requires material strength that is much greater than the material strength of normal matter. The electromagnetic force holds normal matter together. The strong nuclear force is the only alternative. It holds quark nuggets together. Strong-force material strength, the corresponding nuclear mass density, and energy deposition in the MJ/m range in solid density matter are uniquely consistent with quark nuggets. Therefore, hypervelocity penetration through many meters or kilometers of solid or liquid density normal matter and energy deposition in the MJ/m range are a unique signature of an MQN. Therefore, the deeply buried and shattered granite is consistent with an MQN impact.
4.2. Probability of Fractured Granite Attributable to the Impactor That Made the 1985 Crater
- P1 = probability of the single shattered boulder being randomly located within the effective range Reff of the impactor trajectory for fracturing granite. P1 = volume_ratio = πReff2 L/(633 m3 volume of excavation), where L ~ 5m depth of excavation
- P2 = probability of 10 intact boulders being outside the effective range Reff. Because the probability that one boulder is outside Reff is 1 − the probability it is inside Reff and since all 10 are assumed to be independently located, P2 = (1 ₋ volume_ratio)10.
4.3. Less Than 20-m Diameter Craters Are Incompatible with Normal-Matter Impactors
4.4. Normal-Matter Impactors Delivering the Inferred Energy to the Peat Are Incompatible with Shattering Granite 4.7 m below the Surface
4.5. Alternative Explanations
4.6. Limitations to Evidence and Need for Systematic Study
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Excavations
Appendix B. Additional Candidate Sites for MQN Impacts in County Donegal
GPS Coordinates | Diameter | Description |
---|---|---|
54.920869, −8.398206 | 6 m ± 2 m | very circular, more faded than other shapes |
54.921385, −8.296381 | 6 m ± 2 m | circular, lighter strip running through circle |
54.926524, −8.310256 | 6 m ± 2 m | circular, faded, extension from bottom right of circle |
54.927851, −8.34372 | 4 m ± 2 m | very circular, more faded than other shapes |
54.929398, −8.261827 | 3 m ± 2 m | circular, nodule on top right and left of circle |
54.931636, −8.270241 | 2 m ± 1 m | circular, little nodule on top right of circle |
54.931716, −8.225976 | 4 m ± 2 m | circular, dip on bottom right of circle |
54.93359, −8.355017 | 4 m ± 2 m | circular, tiny dip at top left corner, surrounded by white |
54.935795, −8.269017 | 3 m ± 2 m | circular, sort of flat on top and bottom |
54.93674, −8.265257 | 2 m ± 1 m | very circular, surrounded by white |
54.937784, −8.267118 | 3 m ± 2 m | circular, nodule on top left of circle |
54.938974, −8.274889 | 4 m ± 2 m | circular, dip on top left of circle |
54.939262, −8.267507 | 4 m ± 2 m | circular, diagonal oval shape |
54.940387, −8.322002 | 3 m ± 2 m | very circular, more faded than other shapes |
54.942222, −8.319636 | 4 m ± 2 m | circular, white in center of circle |
54.943955, −8.276018 | 2 m ± 1 m | very circular, surrounded by white |
54.944405, −8.278464 | 2 m ± 1 m | very circular, surrounded by white |
54.946506, −8.292173 | 2 m ± 1 m | very circular, small |
54.947903, −8.23144 | 6 m ± 2 m | circular, two small rounded extensions at bottom |
54.949308,−8.399971 | 4 m ± 2 m | circular, nodule on bottom left of circle |
54.949494, −8.298809 | 5 m ± 2 m | circular, upright oval looking, faded |
54.951723, −8.30839 | 5 m ± 2 m | circular, diagonal oval shape |
54.95572, −8.265512 | 3 m ± 2 m | circular, slightly greater width than height |
54.956526, −8.24444 | 3 m ± 2 m | circular, small dip on bottom of circle |
54.962613, −8.273741 | 1 m ± 0.5 m | circular, tiny nodule on right side of circle |
54.964019, −8.305927 | 4 m ± 2 m | very circular, more faded than other shapes |
54.964546, −8.269087 | 2 m ± 1 m | circular, slightly greater height than width |
54.964943, −8.235828 | 2 m ± 1 m | very circular, more faded than other shapes |
54.965639,−8.237676 | 5 m ± 2 m | circular, nodule on bottom right of circle |
54.969051, −8.261765 | 3 m ± 2 m | circular, bit cut off bottom right of circle |
54.969271, −8.277284 | 3 m ± 2 m | circular, nodule on top right of circle |
54.970346, −8.377996 | 1 m ± 0.5 m | circular, diagonal oval shape |
54.971057, −8.320993 | 3 m ± 2 m | circular, extension from bottom of circle |
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Bo (1012 T) | Max Mass (kg) | Mass of MQNs Depositing ~80 MJ/m (kg) | Expected Events/y on Earth Capable of ~ 80 MJ/m | Mass of MQNs Depositing > 1 kJ/m (kg) | Expected Events/y Depositing > 1 kJ/m | Ratio of Rate > 1 KJ to Rate ~80 MJ/m |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0.1 | 7 × 10−3 | NA | 0 | 7 × 10−6 | 100,000,000 | NA |
0.2 | 2 × 10−1 | NA | 0 | 2 × 10−5 | 3,000,000 | NA |
0.3 | 3 | NA | 0 | 4 × 10−5 | 800,000 | NA |
0.4 | 2 × 101 | 16.9 | 2000 | 5 × 10−5 | 600.000 | 350 |
0.5 | 1 × 102 | 13.9 | 3000 | 8 × 10−5 | 200,000 | 50 |
0.6 | 1 × 102 | 11.8 | 3000 | 1 × 10−4 | 50,000 | 20 |
0.7 | 7 × 102 | 10.3 | 900 | 1 × 10−4 | 20,000 | 30 |
0.8 | 1 × 103 | 9.1 | 300 | 2 × 10−4 | 20,000 | 50 |
0.9 | 7 × 103 | 8.2 | 20 | 2 × 10−4 | 1000 | 50 |
1.0 | 2 × 104 | 7.5 | 20 | 2 × 10−4 | 1000 | 60 |
1.1 | 4 × 104 | 6.9 | 20 | 2 × 10−4 | 900 | 50 |
1.2 | 1 × 105 | 6.4 | 40 | 3 × 10−4 | 200 | 60 |
1.3 | 1 × 105 | 5.9 | 20 | 3 × 10−4 | 100 | 50 |
1.4 | 6 × 105 | 5.6 | 30 | 4 × 10−4 | 100 | 40 |
1.5 | 7 × 105 | 5.2 | 20 | 4 × 10−4 | 90 | 40 |
1.6 | 1 × 106 | 4.9 | 0.9 | 4 × 10−4 | 20 | 30 |
1.7 | 3 × 106 | 4.7 | 0.4 | 5 × 10−4 | 10 | 30 |
1.9 | 6 × 106 | 4.2 | 0.3 | 6 × 10−4 | 10 | 30 |
2.0 | 9 × 106 | 4.0 | 0.2 | 6 × 10−4 | 7 | 30 |
2.1 | 1 × 107 | 3.9 | 0.5 | 7 × 10−4 | 2 | 30 |
2.3 | 5 × 107 | 3.6 | 0.06 | 8 × 10−4 | 2 | 30 |
2.4 | 2 × 108 | 3.4 | 0.06 | 8 × 10−4 | 0.4 | 10 |
2.6 | 2 × 108 | 3.2 | 0.003 | 9 × 10−4 | 0.2 | 10 |
2.8 | 6 × 108 | 3.0 | 0.003 | 1 × 10−3 | 0.2 | 10 |
3.0 | 1 × 109 | 2.8 | 0.005 | 1 × 10−3 | 0.03 | 10 |
3.1 | 2 × 109 | 2.7 | 0.0003 | 1 × 10−3 | 0.02 | 10 |
10.0 | 8 × 1014 | 1.0 | 3 × 10−8 | 7 × 10−3 | 2 × 10−7 | 10 |
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VanDevender, J.P.; Schmitt, R.G.; McGinley, N.; Duggan, D.G.; McGinty, S.; VanDevender, A.P.; Wilson, P.; Dixon, D.; Girard, H.; McRae, J. Results of Search for Magnetized Quark-Nugget Dark Matter from Radial Impacts on Earth. Universe 2021, 7, 116. https://doi.org/10.3390/universe7050116
VanDevender JP, Schmitt RG, McGinley N, Duggan DG, McGinty S, VanDevender AP, Wilson P, Dixon D, Girard H, McRae J. Results of Search for Magnetized Quark-Nugget Dark Matter from Radial Impacts on Earth. Universe. 2021; 7(5):116. https://doi.org/10.3390/universe7050116
Chicago/Turabian StyleVanDevender, J. Pace, Robert G. Schmitt, Niall McGinley, David G. Duggan, Seamus McGinty, Aaron P. VanDevender, Peter Wilson, Deborah Dixon, Helen Girard, and Jacquelyn McRae. 2021. "Results of Search for Magnetized Quark-Nugget Dark Matter from Radial Impacts on Earth" Universe 7, no. 5: 116. https://doi.org/10.3390/universe7050116
APA StyleVanDevender, J. P., Schmitt, R. G., McGinley, N., Duggan, D. G., McGinty, S., VanDevender, A. P., Wilson, P., Dixon, D., Girard, H., & McRae, J. (2021). Results of Search for Magnetized Quark-Nugget Dark Matter from Radial Impacts on Earth. Universe, 7(5), 116. https://doi.org/10.3390/universe7050116